Harry James Potter

Basic Information
  • ID: I0000
  • Marriage: Unknown
  • Hogwarts Sorting: 1991-09-01
  • Birth: 1980-07-31

Families

Married

Parents

Ancestors

Perl ed5923a76c6bb8880c28c319e9 Harry James Potter family_ed59312dc737e38d031951e2757 ed5923a76c6bb8880c28c319e9->family_ed59312dc737e38d031951e2757 family_ed5d8562bc6271d5cd5dcc32a94 ed5923a76c6bb8880c28c319e9->family_ed5d8562bc6271d5cd5dcc32a94 ed592b32e775acead90c935caa2 James Potter family_ed59312dc737e38d031951e2757->ed592b32e775acead90c935caa2 ed5931b104adfb68a0eabbd99e Lily J Evans family_ed59312dc737e38d031951e2757->ed5931b104adfb68a0eabbd99e family_ed5936549672cddc25e05ddad8d ed592b32e775acead90c935caa2->family_ed5936549672cddc25e05ddad8d ed5936f69397f50e2df40cf141d Fleamont Potter family_ed5936549672cddc25e05ddad8d->ed5936f69397f50e2df40cf141d ed59377792a19ebf8c50f520283 Euphemia Potter family_ed5936549672cddc25e05ddad8d->ed59377792a19ebf8c50f520283 family_ed5a623afed2165644ffe5ff3b1 ed5936f69397f50e2df40cf141d->family_ed5a623afed2165644ffe5ff3b1 ed5a623f3fdb0cc0fb3a9d9f01 Henry Potter family_ed5a623afed2165644ffe5ff3b1->ed5a623f3fdb0cc0fb3a9d9f01 family_ed5a69635b0155569877967f4e2 ed5a623f3fdb0cc0fb3a9d9f01->family_ed5a69635b0155569877967f4e2 eddab2b50371c5c3ab7f4febf76 Unknown Potter family_ed5a69635b0155569877967f4e2->eddab2b50371c5c3ab7f4febf76 ed5a696f76564b6923ea148b68a Unknown Fleamont family_ed5a69635b0155569877967f4e2->ed5a696f76564b6923ea148b68a family_eddaeab8a0042b17124a0506cc0 ed5931b104adfb68a0eabbd99e->family_eddaeab8a0042b17124a0506cc0 eddaeabff822e1f4346d87cdbee Unknown Evans family_eddaeab8a0042b17124a0506cc0->eddaeabff822e1f4346d87cdbee family_eddaeab8a0042b17124a0506cc0->eddaeabff822e1f4346d87cdbee ed5d856f00c429073f3a38594ab Vernon Dursley family_ed5d8562bc6271d5cd5dcc32a94->ed5d856f00c429073f3a38594ab ed5d86ffc3d264e6405c2805086 Petunia Evans family_ed5d8562bc6271d5cd5dcc32a94->ed5d86ffc3d264e6405c2805086 family_ed5d9235fd9563c046433f1b1f5 ed5d856f00c429073f3a38594ab->family_ed5d9235fd9563c046433f1b1f5 eddda0572a91ad71a89cf2f20fe Unknown Dursley family_ed5d9235fd9563c046433f1b1f5->eddda0572a91ad71a89cf2f20fe ed5d86ffc3d264e6405c2805086->family_eddaeab8a0042b17124a0506cc0

Analysis

Harry as Unreliable Narrator

The Harry Potter series is, with very few exceptions, third-person limited from Harry’s point of view. This is easy to forget, and it has profound consequences for how we read the books. Harry is not an objective observer — he is an abused child who has learned to hide his reactions, who associates attention with pain, and who filters everything we see through that lens.

Consider what the narration skips. The books jump over weeks and occasionally months where nothing “significant” happens. We never see Harry attending the Hufflepuff/Ravenclaw Quidditch game, for example. We do not see the bulk of his daily interactions with anyone. But it is in these non-significant times that Harry would be growing in relationship with all the rest of his classmates, year mates, and housemates. He would be at meals with them, in the library working on assignments around them, in the common room hanging out. They are living in close proximity for ten months of each year, and yet at the formational meeting for the DA, Harry is apparently unsure of Susan’s name, despite the fact that she has been in his herbology class for four years at that point.1 I had 280 people in my high school class, and by the end of senior year, I probably had a few that I did not immediately recognise by name, even though many I knew nothing else about them, but most of them I knew at least that much. It is crazy to think that, with only forty people in his class, Harry did not learn at least their last names and faces (since the professors mostly use last names).

This does not make sense if we take the narration at face value. It does make sense if we recognise that Harry self-isolates so profoundly that his classmates do not settle into distinct individuals in his mind. He is not really a classmate to them — he is “The Boy Who Lived” and they go out of their way to see him in the halls while making no effort to disguise the fact that they are talking about him incessantly.2 Even if this persisted only a short time, it made a profound impression on Harry, who comes from a background where attention is associated with pain. They are not really people to him because he is not really a person to them. Why this is the case — the effects of his upbringing on his ability to form relationships — is discussed elsewhere.

The same lens explains other oddities. The time skips are not just a narrative convenience; they reflect a narrator who does not register the ordinary. The books show us what Harry considers significant, and Harry’s sense of what matters is warped by his history. See my overview on Shipping for how this affects our ability to evaluate his relationships.

Appearance

On a truly trivial note, the scene from Snape’s memory showing the confrontation after the OWL tests shows that James purposefully messed up his hair.3 Harry’s hair is unfix-ably messy. Unfortunately, we know that while James did mess up his hair, it was also unfix-ably untidy.4 The most likely explanation of this is that it is purely genetic, but lots of authors have had fun speculating a magical origin for this hair. I read one idea that I found really amusing, that Harry’s hair was a prank that James played on Lily.5 As I said, the book 1 evidence probably contradicts the theory, but it is a great one.

At the beginning of book 5, we read that Harry “was a skinny, black-haired, bespectacled boy who had the pinched, slightly unhealthy look of someone who has grown a lot in a short space of time.”6 Since at the end of book four we know that James Potter was still taller than Harry,7 either this growth spurt happened after the graveyard scene (despite Harry’s poor diet at Privet Drive), or it was insufficient to make him taller than his father. Either way, Harry observed that he is roughly the same height his father was at age 15/16 by the end of that year.8 So either the effects of his childhood malnutrition have been healed, or Mrs. Rowling (possibly unconsciously) chose to utterly ignore the high probability of such effects.9 For more on the general problem of abuse in fiction and the tension between realism and storytelling, see the dedicated discussion. Either way, we still have no clear indication of exactly how tall this is. We know only a few things definitively:

See my further comments on growth.

While some authors highly object to Harry looking so very like James, I have seen families where one or more children take very strongly after one of the two parents. Thus, this does not bother me. What does is the repeated emphasis on him having Lily’s eyes, yet he has James vision. That, to me, does require explanation. Fortunately for the over analytical reader, there are reasonable, if unconfirmed, explanations available. Harry’s need for glasses is probably either an effect of from his scar, or an effect from living in the cupboard. Since both are speculation, we do not know which.


  1. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Bloomsbury UK (2003), Kindle Locations 4953-4954,5010-5014.

  2. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone Bloomsbury Pub Ltd (2004). page 131.

  3. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Kindle Locations 9456-9457. Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.

  4. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone p. 208. Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.

  5. Tom Kristal. Prongs Final Prank FanFiction by FictionPress Published 2008-03-26. Last Viewed 2020-07-10.

  6. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire Kindle Locations 11016-11017. Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.

  7. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire Kindle Location 9936. Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.

  8. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Kindle Locations 9410-9411 . Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.

  9. The research on this is somewhat mixed, and it would take more work than I have time for to weed out infantile starvation versus adolescent starvation versus starvation during puberty, and yes the difference clearly matters. See the results at https://scholar.google.com/scholar?q=effects+of+childhood+starvation+on+height&hl=en&as_sdt=0&as_vis=1&oi=scholart

  10. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows page 17. Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.

  11. Mrs. J. K. Rowling. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows page 116. Pottermore Limited. American Kindle Edition.