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ELA 12: 2.16 Harry Potter’s School Days 163 Views
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Description:
Who wants to read another story about a kid going off to boarding school? Apparently, pretty much everybody.
Transcript
- 00:02
Lots of the action in the Harry Potter books takes place at Hogwarts, a [witch casts spell]
- 00:06
magical British boarding school that just happens to have the same name as a
- 00:10
debilitating skin condition that runs rampant in the swine community. Sad... Well, [sad warty pig]
- 00:16
the Harry Potter books definitely weren't the first ones to be set at a [boarding school literature timeline]
- 00:19
British boarding school. It's a tradition that goes all the way back to Thomas
Full Transcript
- 00:23
Hughes' 1857 novel, Tom Brown's School Days. And believe it or not, the history of the
- 00:28
British boarding school goes back even further--all the way back to the 14th
- 00:32
century. We're talking pre-invention of the printing press. You might not be a [printing press diagram]
- 00:36
huge fan of having to read the textbooks you get in school, but it's a lot better [student asleep in class]
- 00:39
than having to copy your own. A whole bunch of boarding schools were founded
- 00:43
in the Middle Ages, including Eton, Winchester, Harrow, and Rugby, and they [schools pictured]
- 00:48
kept going for centuries. But by the 19th century, some people were starting to
- 00:52
worry that these places were becoming sites of moral decay... Not to be confused [school collapses]
- 00:56
with molar decay, which is potentially even more distressing. Sure, the kids at [scary dentist lady]
- 01:01
these boarding schools we're learning some Greek and some Latin, but when they [angelic students]
- 01:04
weren't in class, they could be real monsters, rioting and terrorizing the
- 01:08
local townsfolk. And when a bunch of kids burn down your home, you don't really [angelic students burn down village]
- 01:11
care how well they translate Latin. So in 1828, when Thomas Arnold became the
- 01:16
headmaster of Rugby, he made a bunch of reforms to the school to turn these wild [disciplined students]
- 01:19
boys into proper gentleman. Stuff like emphasizing Christian values, giving
- 01:25
prefects more of a disciplinary role, and putting the boarding houses under the
- 01:28
guidance of teachers. Not exactly the recipe for a wild party. It was this kind
- 01:33
of 19th century boarding school that was the setting for Tom Brown's School Days, [book pictured]
- 01:37
the story of an 11-year-old boy who triumphs over his bullies, developing
- 01:42
into a good-hearted moral young man. Well, he didn't have a lightning bolt scar, but [not-Harry Potter pictured]
- 01:46
he might as well have. Although such stories might seem relatively simple,
- 01:50
they sold really well, kicking off a craze of similar tales. Part of J.K. [books fly off shelves]
- 01:54
Rowling's success came from picking up the baton of the British boarding school
- 01:57
story and running with it in a more magical, more
- 02:01
wand-centric direction. Whether we read one of those initial school stories or the [Rowling uses story structure]
- 02:05
recent Harry Potter books, the story structure is surprisingly similar. We see [book comparison]
- 02:10
young people learning from their encounters with bullies, friends, and
- 02:13
teachers slowly but surely developing into the upstanding citizens British [students develop]
- 02:17
boarding schools were meant to produce. Of course, only a select few of those
- 02:21
young people have to fight a powerful evil wizard intent on killing them. [Harry Potter fights Voldemort]
- 02:25
Spoiler alert: it ain't Tom Brown.
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