QUOTE(Sethtaylorsummer @ Feb 3 2008, 10:52 PM)

Hmm, while I see everyone's points about this being open to interpretation and that we will all bring our own world views to the party, so to speak, I do think that I agree with Roonwit: JKR's opinions on what her characters are like and why are, I feel, more valid than those of someone who is merely reading the text. I have written a book myself. Nothing like as intricate as Harry Potter and it will likely never see the light of day. But if it ever did there are things that I know about the characters and their motivations that inform how they acted but didn't 'make the cut' to get into the book. There are unnecessary scenes that have to be removed to make the story flow better, but they still happened to those charcters and will have an impact on how they may react later in the story. JKR wrote certain characters knowing things about them that didn't make the grade to give us a good story, or that took emphasis too far away from Harry. That doesn't mean that what she didn't put in didn't affect those characters and their actions. If she says DD is gay then he is: she wrote the books with that in mind and so this knowledge informed his character whether it was spelled out in the books or not.
Well, I write to. So I know what you're saying, but I still don't share this mindset. Of course the writer knows things we don't know. And may never know for that matter. But still, the cut piece can't be that critical. Or they wouldn't be cut to begin with.
Does that make the cut pieces insignificant? It does somewhat. Yes, because it can still impact the story. But it might be in a way that's so indirect it doesn't really matter. No, because the new information doesn't actually change the story.
Adding to a story isn't the same as changing it. A few sentences isn't the same as a missing chapter. Even though a few sentences can be of great magnitude, it still would've been unreasonable to leave them out it they were to
actually effect the story.
I think we're muddling the difference between fact and feeling. I think in the matter of Dumbledore's sexuality, it's purely a matter of perception. It's only different because "we want it to feel that way". A fact
can't change a story if doesn't change anything the character did or didn't do.
The interpretation is an entirely different matter. A person can't write and try to deny people the right to form there own opinions. Because it'll happen whether they want their readers to or not. Even if they're only doing it subconsciously.
I think we were arguing about a point that's beside itself from the very beginning. Every author knows there'll be criticism. Good and bad reviews, more or less. It doesn't matter if it's a published novel or some silly fanfic. Once the decision comes to share it, you open it up for discussion. Which can also be criticism.
Where does criticism come from? It's rooted in individual interpretation and opinion. If an author can't accept this, then they shouldn't share it to begin with. All they can do is create it. After that point, it's out of there's hands. It's sort like having a kid. You can raise them, inform them of things you feel are right or wrong, etc. But once you've released them? They're out of your control. This is same concept, try as though we might to deny it.
Now look at the author as similar to a parent in the analogy. Does a parent know what's best? Most of the time, but not always. Is there opinion valid? Certainly, but disagreement with it doesn't make one right or wrong. It is
not, however, the beginning and ending of all things. You can birth the child, but you can't control it's destiny.
QUOTE
I don't believe everything she says 'just because' ... I believe it because I understand how these details may have been fully worked out but not make it into the books. Now obviously other people are free to not believe what they hear from JKR, but to say that my interpretation is just as valid as hers just doesn't wash with me because I don't have the rich background history for the world and the characters that she does so to my mind her interpretation trumps mine, just as I feel my interpretation of my characters will trump that of someone not privy to the extra information I have.
But there are people who're like this. I can only explain it as "blind devotion". I've seen it repeatedly in several individuals in many places. For example, one day they're practically condemning a character to hell because they loath everything about them.
But with one unexpected tidbit of information, they're defending to them the death. Maybe they truly have had a change of heart about how they feel about the character in question. Maybe not. It could be that they're just
so desperate for their every word and thought to jive with the author said, they deny themselves any free thought or opinion. Not just on that matter. But in regards to the work as whole.
Which, in itself, isn't a good. It's how people get strung along becoming vehement supporters of something without any kind of clue as to what it's actually about. Yes, it only a book. But this kind of depth of support from a person, and an author could pretty much burn what they previously wrote, do something new and entirely contrary to the former, and then they'd go around accepting it as
the right version just because the author wrote a new one. I know it's extreme, but I know people who'd react that way.