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Ari (creature of dust, child of God) ([personal profile] wisdomeagle) wrote2006-02-08 01:32 pm

moments of otp

By the end of the lesson, only Hermione Granger had made any difference to her match; Professor McGonagall showed the class how it had gone all silver and pointy and gave Hermione a rare smile. - HPSS/PS page something or other.

++++

Not really unrelatedly, in Matilda the movie, I really think Miss Honey/Matilda reads more as, well, Miss Honey slash Matilda than as a mother-daughter thing. Here's why:


Because I'm a big perv. But really, honestly, here's why:

1) The scene where Miss Honey finds out Matilda's brilliant. She asks Matilda what she likes to read, and Matilda says she's reading Dickens. "I could read Dickens all day."

Miss Honey says, in a hush, "So could I."

That scene to me feels romantic. It feels like two people discovering a shared interest, and for both of them, the rest of the world evaporates and it's just that, a spark of friendship. They're kindred spirits, the race that knows Joseph. There's nothing teacher-studently in that moment; they're connecting to each other on the same level - and because of her intelligence, Matilda can do that.

2) Miss Honey telling Matilda the story of her life feels very un-teacherly to me. It also feels unmaternal, but that might just be reflective of my own relationship with my own mother. But still - it's a big confidence, and Miss Honey is treating Matilda like an adult. Partially she sees herself reflected in Matilda ("it's wonderful that you feel so powerful; many people don't"), but she's also just confiding in someone, near as we know for the first time, about her own life.

3) Matilda doesn't treat Miss Honey as an authority figure. Now, partially, there are only four adults in the movie (slashy FBI agents speedboat salesmen aside) - the Wormwoods, Miss Honey, and Miss Trunchbull - and of course Matilda doesn't treat Miss Honey the way she treats the others, since Miss Honey is actually attractive and intelligent and not actually batshit crazy. So the way Matilda treats authority figures - ignoring them and punishing them, mostly - is completely inappropriate for Miss Honey.

But at the same time, she doesn't exactly respect Miss Honey. While it's Miss Honey who asks Matilda to tea, it's Matilda who initiates the first trip to Trunchbull's house, and it's Matilda who speeds ahead while Miss Honey follows. Matilda is playfully disobedient and Miss Honey seems to revel in it, yes, but she Matilda is not following directives.

There's nothing in their relationship that smacks of authority. Miss Honey has nothing to teach Matilda, and she makes no rules for her. Theirs is an economy of promises - "Don't go in the Trunchbull's house again." "I won't, I promise."

And later, "Everything will be okay, I promise."

"You promised you wouldn't go back in her house!"

"I didn't! I did it with my mind!"

These promises are just that - promises. They're based in trust, not obedience, and they are again decidedly unpaternal.

Even at movie's end, there's no sign of Miss Honey disciplining Matilda in any way. Matilda is by no means a perfect child, and because she's so clever she gets away with a lot of imperfection, but Miss Honey does nothing to temper that.

4) There are moments when Miss Honey does try to be motherly/teacherly/wisdom-dispense-y -- for instance, when Matilda thinks she can move things with her mind but can't demonstrate it, and Miss Honey tries to comfort her, "Sometimes we can do a thing until we want to show someone. Sometimes a thing is lost until we ask someone to help us look for it."

But Matilda dismisses the advice: "This isn't like that."

Whatever she wants from Miss Honey, it's not wisdom.

5) But Matilda can and does offer a great deal to Miss Honey. She's cast as knight-in-armor, and she gifts Miss Honey with Lyssie-doll and with the chocolates, and moreover she saves them both from their hideous families and gets rid of the Trunchbull forever. It's in the nature of children's stories for children to triumph without the aid of adults. Parents in children's books are evil or incompetent or both; Miss Honey is not, so she's not a parent. The role of good parent hardly exists in literature, and there's nothing in what Miss Honey does to make her feel like a parent at all.

She tries to empower Matilda (again, "it's wonderful you feel so powerful,") but it's Matilda who actually empowers - it's she who prompts Miss Honey to confront the Trunchbull again and again until finally Matilda gets rid of her forever. It parallels Matilda's relationship with Lavender - (In the climax, Lavender ends up hanging from a bar; Matilda tells her to let go and Lav floats gently down and says, "I didn't know I could do that!") Matilda makes people feel strong and powerful.

6) I have overstated my point; there is one scene where Miss Honey is genuinely heroic - the Trunchbull says it's the "most interesting thing you've ever done." She rescues Matilda from the Chokey. But even there, Miss Honey and Matilda are both disempowered by the Trunchbull. The act is not of maternal forgiveness for wrongdoing, but a rescue by a sibling equally susceptible to a parent's wrath.

Similarly when Miss Honey leaves the book for Matilda without the Wormwoods seeing - they conspire against the evil adults/authority figures, but Miss Honey herself is not an authority figure - she doesn't have the power to rescue Matilda from her parents by overt means.

7) It occurs to me that Matilda does "rescue" her father from the slashy speedboat salesmen when she destroys their tape; when viewed in this light, perhaps Miss Honey is just another hapless adult in Matilda's life who needs her control, manipulation, and power in order to survive.

But looking at everything in light of the love-at-first-sight Dickens moment, I'm more inclined to view Matilda as a love story, in which they triumph over terrible odds in order to be together and to live happily ever after. The montage at the end - they play with hula hoops, they sew, they roll around on the lawn, they read together - to me reinforces the image of them as peers. Matilda is smarter (though the whole issue of Matilda's intelligence is utterly problematic and the subject of another post altogether, comparing bookverse and movieverse and showing why Matilda is Ravenclaw in the book and Gryffindor in the movie) and Miss Honey is older, but ultimately they play together and read together and learn together and build a life together that, based on the ending montage, doesn't need Hortensia or Bruce or Lavender to be complete. I'm not saying that they read as sexual to me, because they don't, but the relationship does read as more romantic than maternal.

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-08 09:14 pm (UTC)(link)
Damn if you're not persuasive. You're right of course; they do relate to each other as peers.

Now this has me thinking about other child characters who can act as a peer with adults. It's a common trope in kidslit, of course, and also in my own writing, fanfic and original (which is littered with teenaged supergenius girls). It's the place from which Dawn/Giles comes from, I suppose, as well as other things.

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-08 09:32 pm (UTC)(link)
Dawn is at the age Buffy was when she was Called, so does it even make sense to think of her as a child? Of course, the ability to relate to adults as peers is relevant for teenagers as well.

What strikes me particularly about your mention of Dawn/Giles is that that gets my brain going along the lines of non-adults who want to be (treated like) adults, which is where my interest lies (having been one of those children/teens), whereas thinking about Ari's talk about the Matilda movie (which I haven't seen) I find myself thinking that Matilda found a person with whom she could safely be a child (Ari's description of the ending montage sticks with me particularly) and I secondarily think of the idea that Matilda is an adult figure for Miss Honey, which makes sense to me (esp. given Ari's talk about the movie playing up Matilda's Gryffindor-ness) and is interesting also because I'm not sure I see Miss Honey as being able to be on Matilda's level intellectually. (I know at the end of the book we have Matilda finally finding sufficiently challenging material into which to channel her energies, and it's been years since I read the book so I can't remember what grade level she ends up at, but I don't recall ever seeing Miss Honey depicted as particularly intellectual; she's teaching kindergartners, and the big appeal she has is her kindness -- which of course is nothing to sneeze at, esp. given the environment of the Wormwoods and the Trunchbull, but Matilda isn't drawn to her because she is an intellectual equal.)

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-08 09:59 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh, I wait until Dawn is in her mid-to-late twenties to make the Dawn/Giles happen, so it's certainly not the same thing logically. But I think it sort of comes from the same place--it's Dawn's adolescence which attracts me to her character, because she's able to live out the adolescent fantasy which to me Buffy is all about. That "child" aspect of Dawn is forever associated to her with me, so that even when she is on paper an adult her acting like an adult hits one of my kinks (which is why I love writing her post-"Chosen"). Becoming an adult and a possible lover and thus equal to Giles-the-father-figure (the ultimate expression of her maturity) is for me a type of coming-of-age story, just as the romance Ari's painted between movie!verse Maltilda/Miss Honey is a coming-of-age story where Matilda earns her independece (rather than, Ari argues persuasively, merely transferring her obedience to a more palatable parental figure) and becomes an equal to the adult. A lot of potentially squicky pairings--basically any parent!kink or teacher!kink--suddenly make sense to me on this level. (It'd all depend on how well the writer could persuade me that the child/adolescent figure really was capable of acting as an adult and thus have the ability to consent.)

non-adults who want to be (treated like) adults, which is where my interest lies (having been one of those children/teens)

I still support child suffrage, although not in the same way or quite as vehemently as I did as a child.

I find myself thinking that Matilda found a person with whom she could safely be a child

That makes sense, and I think you could support that reading if you had seen the movie, but that's not the place Ari's post sent me to. I tend to think that Ari was</> setting up Miss Honey as Matilda's intellectual equal (or close enough), especially with her comment about the Dickens moment (which I don't actually remember). Also, I find myself convinced by the post that in the movie that Miss Honey isn't an emotional adult (although Matilda is), and so I think the ending montage is as much about Miss Honey reclaiming the happy childhood Miss Trunchbull never let her have than it is about Matilda.

Hmm, now I really want to write movie!verse Matilda/Jenny and explore these dynamics.

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-08 10:49 pm (UTC)(link)
Yep. There is (as I was discussing with Elizabeth after I wrote "Permutations") a very real sense of Valentine Wiggin in Dawn's High-Watcher-ness (in my Watcher!verse universe): I've always been attracted to the idea of the teenaged girl who takes over the world (a couple years ago I would have said I was attracted to the teenaged girl herself). With Dawn, I sort of get to have my cake and eat it too.

In a sense, Matilda is always-already earning independence/acting independently - she teaches herself to read, she learns, in the words of the movie's vo, "something most people never learn - to take care of herself," and as soon as she figures out how, she's punishing adults and changing the world to her liking.

And I think this is why her story speaks to so many people. The "changing the world to her liking" is particularly will-to-power-y, an expression of an adolescent fantasy.

Which is why Miss Honey's presence feels so odd. Matilda doesn't need a caretaker (the vo already told us she can take care of herself) and she doesn't need a teacher (she taught herself to read), so Miss Honey's role must be something different....

I see the potential for much angst. Which is why I want to write the fic.

My hypnotic powers are already taking effect Please do!

My canon is at home; I never thought to bring the movie to school with me. Also, I'm not sure I could make it Matilda/Jenny, at least not at first; she'd need a same-age love interest to make Jenny angst some more. Any good crossover candidates? (The movie is set sometime in the 90s, right?)

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 02:08 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I was hoping for someone with whom I wouldn't have to work quite so hard for the crossover, which I was hoping to be seamless. I love female characters; you'd think I'd be able to think of a female character from a realistic universe set in a more or less contemporary setting, wouldn't you?

(Well, I can't.)

Elizabeth would check my school library? Anyway, I had already checked, and no.. Nor would I think it'd be in the local library, which is pretty pathetic (we're in the middle of rural nowhere).

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 03:24 am (UTC)(link)
You totally commented while I was commenting.

And dude, I had totally forgotten about your crazy ideas about buying things and how my ILL suggestions were in large part reactions against that.

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 03:23 am (UTC)(link)
Elizabeth would check my school library?

Elizabeth practically grew up in her town's wonderful library and thinks interlibrary loan is one of the best inventions ever (and has been spoiled by a vast interlibrary loan network where she lives). Thus frequently Ari has lamented a lack of some media item and Elizabeth has helpfully suggested the library -- with a concluding statement wherein Elizabeth points out that yes Ari can in fact request it ILL because Elizabeth knows where Ari lives and has checked her library network catalog. Because Elizabeth is destined to become a reference librarian.

Alixtii probably does not rate such effort from Elizabeth but Ari is clearly (finally) adopting some of my good habits :)

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 03:25 am (UTC)(link)
ROTFL!

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 03:19 am (UTC)(link)
and God I should actually like, comment on people's posts when they make them and not save it all up for conversation in my lj

Word, yo.

The reason Matilda spoke to me is not so much she-had-power-over-grownups as she-won-the-day-and-got-the-girl, though I'm not sure how I articulated that when I was younger (maybe when I was first introduced to the text, it was just "ooh, she reads books just like me!")

Is it bad that Matilda's bookworm nature remains my primary reason for loving her? (The power-over-grownups doesn't particularly speak to me who always had positive relationships with adults, though I certainly felt the narrative powerfully while I was reading it -- as one should if a story is well-written.)

Local library? (I checked, because I am becoming more like Elizabeth every day

*grins and loves* I am so glad my good influence is rubbing off on you.

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 03:14 am (UTC)(link)
I know for me and many viewers/fans, Dawn as younger-sister is really hard to shake, even though she's almost an adult by series end and can be aged up regardless, she feels like a younger-sister to me.

Interesting. I never particularly identified with any of the Scooby Gang (Willow if I had to, but she was way more genius than I ever was, plus way prettier) but both Tara and Dawn both pinged me very much as "Oh, she's so very much like me." So I in fact tend to think of them (Dawn in particular) as their own entities rather than in connection to the primary characters. And I never think of Dawn as little sister. I sometimes use the problematic of her being Buffy's sister when I'm ficcing (in Dawn/Spike, for example) but I mostly just think of her as another character and she is very much one of my primary objects of identification/desire.

I was I think in elementary school when I read BSC, and I thought of the characters as being So Much Older Than Me, with that distant awe kids have for older kids. I now think of them (when I think of canon) as annoyingly existing in a younger than me 'verse that doesn't make a whole lot of reality sense; and when I think of fic I generally think of them as college age (since it makes for easy sexualizing while still maintaining a lot of the canon dynamics, plus I'm sure the fact that college still feels like the default norm for me after four years there).

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 02:30 pm (UTC)(link)
Identifying with viewpoint characters certainly makes sense. I think in part I feel like for an ensemble show there are multiple viewpoints of entry even if there is one dominant protagonist.

I also tend to view texts from my outside-the-text perspective rather than from the perspective of any of the characters. Some of my critique is definitely grounded in the world of the text, but I also critique it as a text -- critiquing the creator's decisions.

I always thought of myself as (wanting to be) adult, so I rather suspect that plays a large role in my thinking of older-than-me characters as "just people," and in lusting after them I probably age myself up to be peer with them. (Perving on the age differential is definitely something I do in fanfic and I frequently place myself in the markedly younger character's position, but that's a separate kind of fantasy.)

Then again, the BSCverse character whose head I slip into most easily is a 15-year-old deeply closeted gay boy, so I have no idea what this says about me.

That being a queer adolescent misfit is a strong point of identity for you?

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2009-10-24 12:46 am (UTC)(link)
Hmm, yes, about Giles seeming much older than, say, Jack does.

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 02:29 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, I'm all over the adult/teen thing (holdover from my own teen years I'm sure) so I was more making a distinction between child-as-proto-adult and teen-as-actual-adult.

Buffy has never been about the adolescence issues for me, though obviously I see in the text a lot of the metaphors Joss uses for such. When I think about meta for the text I think about issues of good and evil, and while I was watching the show I was always engaged and desirous to continue most because of the characters and caring about them and what happened to them.

I still support child suffrage, although not in the same way or quite as vehemently as I did as a child.

Oh, man, I have to restrain my cravings for competency requirements for adult voters (though my desire that everyone be ridiculously well-informed would be appeased somewhat if the people making the laws and running for the offices -- and those opposing such -- made real efforts to disseminate information amongst the populace).

I well remember my adolescent insistences that I had solutions to major problems, and I equally well remember my father hearing me out and pointing out the ways in which matters were more complicated than I saw.

I think the ending montage is as much about Miss Honey reclaiming the happy childhood Miss Trunchbull never let her have than it is about Matilda

Oh, I definitely agree. I said in response to the original post that "I rather suspect that the ideal in Dahl's children's books is eternal childness," and even leaving aside that claim, happy childhood is clearly an important issue in Dahl's kidlit, and there's a huge element of mutuality in the Matilda/Miss Honey relationship with them being able to save each other in some ways and give each other what they had been denied.

Movieverse Matilda and Jenny Calendar? Interesting.

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 02:37 am (UTC)(link)
Oh, I'm all over the adult/teen thing (holdover from my own teen years I'm sure) so I was more making a distinction between child-as-proto-adult and teen-as-actual-adult.

I'm not quite sure what you mean by this. Could you elaborate?

Oh, man, I have to restrain my cravings for competency requirements for adult voters (though my desire that everyone be ridiculously well-informed would be appeased somewhat if the people making the laws and running for the offices -- and those opposing such -- made real efforts to disseminate information amongst the populace).

Yes yes YES! If only competencey restrictions weren't so clearly historically used to disenfranchise minorities. Robert Heinlein actually has a good essay about different possible competency requirements that could be put in place and what the effects of various possibilities might be.

Movieverse Matilda and Jenny Calendar? Interesting.

Isn't Miss Honey's first name Jennifer? I just can't see teen!Matilda calling her guardian "Miss Honey."

[identity profile] hermionesviolin.livejournal.com 2006-02-09 03:32 am (UTC)(link)
> > Oh, I'm all over the adult/teen thing (holdover from my own teen years I'm sure) so I was more making a distinction between child-as-proto-adult and teen-as-actual-adult.
> I'm not quite sure what you mean by this. Could you elaborate?

I was thinking particularly of your statement that That "child" aspect of Dawn is forever associated to her with me. I'm far more interested in adults than children, so I meant that I was interested in teenagers who were capable of functioning as adults rather than in children who are adultlike in some ways.

Also, you had said "I wait until Dawn is in her mid-to-late twenties to make the Dawn/Giles happen, so it's certainly not the same thing logically" and I was explaining that I have no problem with adult/teen relationships so I don't necessarily age Dawn up and thus was saying "does it even make sense to think of her as a child?" not to say "Dawn/Giles means Dawn is not a good comparison for Matilda/Miss Honey" but rather to say "Dawn is very adultlike."

Does that make more sense?

If only competencey restrictions weren't so clearly historically used to disenfranchise minorities. Robert Heinlein actually has a good essay about different possible competency requirements that could be put in place and what the effects of various possibilities might be.

I'd be interested to read that Heinlein essay.

My default fallback solution for most every problem is to more education (in a broad sense, not necessarily an endorsement of how the current educational system is run or idealized by any number of groups) -- in this case, encouraging people to educate themselves about political issues.

Isn't Miss Honey's first name Jennifer? I just can't see teen!Matilda calling her guardian "Miss Honey."

Oh, that's entirely possible. As I said elsewhere in this discussion, it's been years since I read the book, and obviously I think of her primarily as "Miss Honey." That makes your statement far less non-sequitor-y :)

[And yes, IMDb lists her as: Miss Jennifer 'Jenny' Honey]

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2009-10-24 01:22 am (UTC)(link)
Does that make more sense?

Yeah, that makes a lot of sense. Fascinating--certainly not the way I percieve adolescence. For one thing, I don't think I believe there really any such thing as "adultness" as a category--although I suppose I could say that about most soi-disant categories. For me, I think it has to do more with the way their identity is interpellated: a teenager is someone who isn't fully treated as an adult.

After all, once a human creature is old enough to acquire language s/he is by necessity already a rational agent. So in that sense, can we ever really remember not being "adults"?

I'd be interested to read that Heinlein essay.

I found the essay; it's the Afterword to "Who Are the Heirs of Patrick Henry?" in Expanded Universe (Ace, 1980), pages 396-402.

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2007-10-17 12:26 am (UTC)(link)
In retrospect, of course you can--but I wouldn't be able to sustain that state of mind long enough to support a fiction.

[identity profile] alixtii.livejournal.com 2006-02-08 10:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Because I am a great big perv. The end.

Hmm, yis.

If I really had to pinpoint my kink, it wouldn't be children-relating-to-adults as peers per se so much as eroticizing the inequality in adult-child interaction

Yeah. I still think I often find that squicky, but of course it is fun to read when you write it. (And sometimes the squick can be the point.) Hoory for Ari's kinks!