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The Hoya

Georgetown University’s Newspaper of Record since 1920

The Hoya

Georgetown University’s Newspaper of Record since 1920

The Hoya

Snape Doesn’t Deserve Your Sympathy

This is my penultimate column, which feels weird. But since it is my senior year and the end is nigh, it’s time to talk about my biggest pop culture pet peeve: Severus Snape and the people who love him. This is a rant I’ve been sitting on for almost seven years, and it’s time to let it loose.

I love a good redemption arc. The bad guy finding his soul and using his skills for good? It’s a classic story that, when done well, can be very powerful. But Snape’s redemption arc is clumsy and doesn’t leave him as pristine as fans like to think. A quick Google search brings up hundreds of fans who love Snape — who romanticize his story — and they’re wrong.

In “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” Harry uses a Pensieve to access Snape’s memories. Through this, he learns not only of Snape’s undying love for Harry’s mother, Lily, but also that after her death Snape swore to keep Harry alive for that love. He puts himself in incredibly dangerous situations and risks his life for Dumbledore. He’s so courageous that Harry names one of his kids after him.

That’s the perfect, pretty narrative. But that’s not what really happened.

Snape’s outsider angst fueled him to join the extremely heinous Death Eaters, despite the fact that they were dedicated to destroying Mudbloods. He only had a change of heart — sort of — when Voldemort’s target was Lily (oh, and Snape’s the one who told him about the prophecy; apparently, killing is only wrong when you know the person). Even then, he asks Dumbledore to save Lily and explicitly doesn’t care about James and Harry. Only after Lily dies does he decide to help Dumbledore, but it’s not because he thinks Voldemort is wrong. It’s to honor Lily’s memory. This is the part where people focus on the heroic stuff, but let’s think about what Snape was also doing at that time: psychologically tormenting an orphaned 11-year-old because he resembled his father.

During that “Deathly Hallows” chapter with the Pensieve, Snape describes Harry as selfish, self-important and arrogant, while Dumbledore counters that all of the other teachers like him. Snape isn’t talking about teenage Harry, who is admittedly a little arrogant; he’s talking about first-year Harry. Harry who was picked on his whole life, who never had a family of his own and who lived in a cupboard under the stairs. He’s a child. Snape never lets it go. Having decided that Harry must be bad news from the start, he spends six years making his life as difficult as possible. That’s a great way to honor Lily’s memory, right?

Before Dumbledore dies, he wonders if Snape might have grown attached to Harry at some point. Snape responds with his Patronus — a doe, in honor of Lily. This is seen as a nobly romantic moment, but I couldn’t help but be struck by how sad it is. For all the good things he’s done, Snape was never motivated by virtue or morality. He was chasing a ghost. It’s creepy.

In exalting Snape, many fans are simultaneously knocking James Potter. Based primarily on one scene of James bullying Snape, many assume that James was brutish, mean and unworthy of Lily for his whole life.

That’s ridiculous. First, Lily never would have married James if he hadn’t become a better person; Remus and Sirius both tell Harry this. Second, he joined the Order of the Phoenix, an incredibly dangerous group, in order to try to make the world a better place. He easily could have tried to sneak through the war without joining a side, as many wizards and witches did. Instead, he fought.

Even when he was misguided in school, he was an incredibly loyal friend. When he and Sirius found out that Lupin was a werewolf, rather than hurt or reject him, they embraced him and decided to learn incredibly difficult magic in order to make the worst moments of his life more bearable. That’s huge. James also saved Snape’s life when he almost found a transformed Lupin, which Snape seemed ungrateful for later.

Oh, and the night he and Lily died? While Snape was willing to sacrifice Harry and James for Lily, James sacrificed himself for Lily and Harry. He was honorable and brave.

This narrative in which Snape is a lovesick, brave hero doesn’t make sense to me. I won’t deny that he had a hard childhood or that he did brave things, but that doesn’t excuse him. There’s nothing heroic about tormenting an orphan.

This is probably an example of how we need to embrace nuance and stop writing characters — and real people — into boxes. Snape, like any real person, is full of contradictions and complex motives that probably he didn’t even fully understand. Painting him as a completely wonderful figure erases some of the most interesting parts of him and also lets him off the hook for bad things he’s done. Meanwhile, I shouldn’t be totally seized by my impulse to write him off as evil.

But in this case, forget nuance. Snape sucks, James rules!

 

Victoria Edel is a senior in the College. Girl Meets World appears every other Friday in the guide.

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  • A

    AaronFeb 19, 2022 at 6:57 pm

    Snape was a terrible person. His death should have went unmourned. He was a bigoted jerk who rarely showed regret and only only ever did the “right” things grudgingly. He’s definitely an interesting character. But a good one in the moral sense? Absolutely not. At best he’ll be in purgatory a long time. But he’s most likely burning in wizard Hell with you-know-who.

    Reply
  • M

    maryamJun 24, 2021 at 2:47 pm

    first of all this judging without knowing the whole story made severus snape marco mafoy and the tom riddle that they are now so stop judging i swore if you have to bear the all the situation that they are been through you will became one of them and severus snape can not hold his emotion and he pick on harry and for your information harry named his son after him beacuse he knows the whole story and why every body talking about his emotion of hate or something else he helped harry so much even after knowing harry hates him and he is always there for him secretly i want to say something to the one who had written this article or what else it called that you need to have a understanding and a kind heart and you need to the whole story

    Reply
    • R

      Robbie P MailmanSep 21, 2021 at 4:26 pm

      @maryam, that is a long run on sentence. I felt more pity that sympathy for Snape but I really don’t think he deserves any tears.

      Reply
  • L

    Letasha Ann KayambooAug 4, 2018 at 11:09 am

    I mostly agree with you. But many fans also allow Snape to redeem himself but not James (James is done a disservice by the author because his character growth is behind the scenes). If Snape deserves forgiveness for being a Death Eater, James can forgiveness for being a schoolyard bully. Even if not forgiveness, at least an acknowledgement that he improved and was on his way to being a decent person. If it’s about casting out bullies, Snape was a bully as a adult after he had redeemed himself. The message of the books is that bullies can be redeemable and heroic. Even Dudley, Draco and Sirius were redeemed.

    Reply
  • S

    SFS 18Jan 16, 2018 at 9:54 pm

    I can understand the author’s dismissal of Snape, but her defense of James Potter, a vicious school bully whose harassment of Snape knew no bounds, is untenable. Why does the author allow for James Potter to redeem himself but not Snape, who, as a double agent, arguably put his life in far greater danger than James Potter ever did?

    Harry Potter has helped our culture be an empathetic one, casting out bullies and cheering for those of us who are different. The difference between Snape and James, in this regard, could not be clearer.

    Reply
    • W

      WelpNov 11, 2019 at 11:23 pm

      I’m not entirely sure I’m 100% correct in this, but Snape became a double agent only after the Potter’s death, since Snape asked Dumbledore for help only then. And Snape had to ask for help because he told Voldemort the prophecy. I’m pretty sure Snape would have figured out that the child it was referring to was Lily’s son, he was a smart person.

      Reply
  • E

    ErinJan 4, 2018 at 3:28 pm

    I disagree. Snape was a hero and far more complicated & better than James or Lily. Lily was a shallow bore from what we saw in the books. All she ever did for the most part was storm away in a huff! She even laughed when Harry almost broke a vase Petunia sent her. Snape did apologize to her. He camped out to do so, risking the wrath of his fellow Slytherins. Lily did not forgive him and, for all the world, it looks like she dumped him to join the in-crowd. I have a hunch she did the same thing to poor Petunia too.

    Reply
  • A

    Annonymos93Jul 11, 2017 at 3:42 pm

    I completely agree! James rules. Snape sucks.

    Reply
  • N

    not cannonMar 28, 2014 at 10:38 am

    How would he ever understand himself? He’s a fictional character

    Reply