Tag: JK Rowling

  • JK Rowling dismisses backlash over trans comments: ‘I don’t care about my legacy’

    JK Rowling dismisses backlash over trans comments: ‘I don’t care about my legacy’

    Rowling said she had received “direct threats of violence” as a result of her stance

    JK Rowling has said she isn’t concerned about how the backlash to her position on transgender issues will affect her legacy, and that anyone who thinks she is has “profoundly” misunderstood her.

    The Harry Potter author has been called transphobic for her views on gender identity and the question of allowing trans women into women-only spaces.

    Speaking in a new podcast, Rowling said she “never meant to upset anyone”.

    “However, I was not uncomfortable with getting off my pedestal.”

    Referring to fans who claim she has “ruined” her legacy, Rowling said they “could not have misunderstood me more profoundly”.

    “I do not walk around my house thinking about my legacy,” she continued.

    “What a pompous way to live your life, walking around thinking, what will my legacy be? Whatever, I’ll be dead. I care about now. I care about the living.”

    Threats of violence

    Rowling has attracted extensive criticism for a series of comments voicing concerns about how trans issues affect women’s rights, and her opposition to Scotland’s gender recognition bill.

    In an essay on her website in 2020, she wrote: “When you throw open the doors of bathrooms and changing rooms to any man who believes or feels he’s a woman… you open the door to any and all men who wish to come inside.”

    Her position has been interpreted by some as transphobic, leading to calls for a boycott of the Harry Potter franchise, ranging from its books and movies to the blockbuster video game Hogwarts Legacy.

    Harry Potter movie actors including Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson have criticised Rowling’s comments.

    Ralph Fiennes, who played Lord Voldemort, came to the author’s defence, calling the abuse she has received “disgusting” and “appalling”.

    She has denied being transphobic, saying she respects “every trans person’s right to live any way that feels authentic and comfortable to them” and that she wants trans people to be free from discrimination and abuse.

    Stars including Eddie Izzard and Helena Bonham Carter have also said they do not consider Rowling’s views to be transphobic, but reflective of her own experience of abuse.

    Daniel Radcliffe and J.K. Rowling
    Image caption, Daniel Radcliffe is among the stars who has distanced himself from JK Rowling

    In the podcast, titled The Witch Trials of JK Rowling, the author said she had also received “direct threats of violence” as a result of her stance.

    “I have had people coming to my house where my kids live, and I’ve had my address posted online. I’ve had what the police, anyway, would regard as credible threats.”

    Rowling later said many questions do not necessarily have clear-cut answers.

    “There is a huge appeal, and I try to show this in the Potter books, to black and white thinking.

    “It’s the easiest place to be and in many ways it’s the safest place to be. If you take an all-or-nothing position on anything, you will definitely find comrades, you will easily find a community. ‘I’ve sworn allegiance to this one simple idea.’

    “What I’ve tried to show in the Potter books, and what I feel strongly myself, is that we should mistrust ourselves most when we are certain.”

    The Witch Trials of JK Rowling is a seven-part series presented by Megan Phelps-Roper, who was raised for 26 years in the extremist Westboro Baptist Church, before escaping in 2012.

    The first two episodes, released on Tuesday, attempt to draw parallels between the Christian fundamentalists who sought to ban the Harry Potter books in the early 2000s, and the activists who are criticising Rowling today.

    Asked about the protesters who burned her books in the early 2000s, claiming they promoted witchcraft, Rowling said: “Book burners, by definition, have placed themselves across a line of rational debate.

    “There is no book on this planet that I would burn, including books that I do think are damaging. Burning, to me, is the last resort of people who cannot argue.”

  • Queen’s death: Elton John, JK Rowling and Paddington Bear among celebrities paying tribute

    Celebrities including Elton John, Daniel Craig and JK Rowling are among those who have shared tributes following the Queen’s death.

    Rolling Stones frontman Sir Mick Jagger described her as “the much beloved grandmother of the nation”.

    He tweeted: “For my whole life Her Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II has always been there. In my childhood I can recall watching her wedding highlights on TV.

    “I remember her as a beautiful young lady, to the much beloved grandmother of the nation. My deepest sympathies are with the Royal Family.”

    Beatles legend Sir Paul McCartney tweeted: “God bless Queen Elizabeth II. May she rest in peace. Long live The King.”

    Sir Elton John tweeted he was “deeply saddened”.

    “She was an inspiring presence to be around and led the country through some of our greatest and darkest moments with grace, decency and a genuine caring warmth,” the singer said.

    “Queen Elizabeth has been a huge part of my life from childhood to this day, and I will miss her dearly.”

    Daniel Craig meets the Queen at the Casino Royale premiere in November 2006
    Image: Daniel Craig meets the Queen at the Casino Royale premiere in November 2006

    Daniel Craig, who appeared with the Queen in a skit for the London Olympics, said she had left “an incomparable legacy and will be profoundly missed”.

    “I, like so many, was deeply saddened by the news today and my thoughts are with the Royal Family, those she loved and all those who loved her,” said the Bond actor.

    Dame Helen Mirren dressed as Queen Elizabeth I performs during the A Gallop Through History Platinum Jubilee celebration at the Royal Windsor Horse Show at Windsor Castle
    Image: Dame Helen Mirren performed in front of the Queen at Jubilee celebrations this year

    Actress Dame Helen Mirren, who played the Queen on screen and stage, said on Instagram: “I am proud to be an Elizabethan. We mourn a woman, who, with or without the crown, was the epitome of nobility.”

    Sir David Attenborough, who was a friend of the Queen for over half a century, praised her “extraordinary ability to put you at your ease”.

    Speaking to PA about his experience of working and broadcasting with the monarch he said: “If there was a technical hitch, she wanted to know what it was, and if it had a funny side, she was quick to see the joke.

    “Yet not for one second could you forget that you were in the presence of someone who had willingly accepted enormous responsibility and dedicated her life to serving the nation – that you were, in short, in the presence of royalty. The whole nation is bereaved.”

    Sir David was first knighted by the Queen in 1985, before being given a second honour in 2020 for services to television broadcasting and to conservation.

    The much-loved naturalist and the Queen celebrated their 90th birthdays just weeks apart in 2016.

    Queen Elizabeth II alongside Sir David Attenborough after she presented both him and Julian Hector, Head of the BBC Natural History Unit, the 2019 Chatham House Prize at the Royal institute of International Affairs, Chatham House, London.
    Image: Sir David Attenborough said the Queen ‘was quick to see the joke’

    David Beckham said her majesty had served with “dignity and grace” until her last days and had comforted the country when “times were tough”.

    He added: “How devastated we all feel today shows what she has meant to people in this country and around the world. How much she inspired us with her leadership.”

    Harry Potter author JK Rowling said the Queen had done her duty.

     

    Source: Sky News

     

     

  • Outrage at UK story ‘justifying’ JK Rowling abuse

    Domestic abuse campaigners on Friday expressed outrage at a front-page story in Britain’s The Sun tabloid where the ex-husband of “Harry Potter” author J.K. Rowling defended hitting her.

    Rowling revealed this week that she suffered domestic abuse in her first marriage and a “serious sexual assault” in her twenties.

    The Sun carried an interview on Friday with the British author’s first husband, Jorge Arantes, under the front-page headline: “I slapped JK and I’m not sorry.”

    It said that when asked about her comments, he said: “I slapped Joanne – but there was not sustained abuse. I’m not sorry for slapping her.”

    Jane Keeper, director of operations at domestic abuse charity Refuge, said the headline “is as irresponsible as it is disappointing”.

    “What this has done is give national media coverage to a perpetrator of domestic abuse to attempt to justify his actions,” she said.

    She said the headline was particularly “shocking” given the timing, with calls to Refuge’s abuse helpline increasing by 66 per cent during the coronavirus lockdown.

    “What sort of message does this front page send to survivors? That their abuser will be given national media headlines to justify their actions? That their abuse is legitimate? That it doesn’t matter?” she asked.

    Scottish Women’s Aid, a charity in Scotland where Rowling now lives, said the front page was “repulsive”.

    “Hundreds of thousands of women and children in Scotland who are living with, or have survived, the terror and trauma of domestic abuse just got a virtual slap by The Sun. For-profit,” it said.

    For decades, victims of abuse have chosen not to speak out because the community around them “would minimise their pain and betrayal and use their words against them”, it said.

    “Their abuser would use the platform to shame and blame them. And nothing would change. Today The Sun is that abuser,” it said.

    In a statement, The Sun said it was “disgusted” by the comments made by Rowling’s ex-husband and noted it had branded him “sick” in its coverage.

    “It was certainly not our intention to ‘enable’ or ‘glorify’ domestic abuse, our intention was to expose a perpetrator’s total lack of remorse. Our sympathies are always with the victims,” it said.

    Rowling revealed her abuse in a lengthy blog post in which she sought to explain her comments about transgender women, which have sparked controversy.

    She has emphasised the importance of biological sex and expressed concern about women-only spaces, but has been accused of being transphobic and faced intense abuse on social media.

    Source: france24.com

  • JK Rowling to publish fairy tale free for lockdown children

    The creator of the “Harry Potter” books JK Rowling said on Tuesday she would release a free online serialisation of a bed-time story she wrote for her children 10 years ago.

    The superstar British writer said she decided to pull “The Ickabog” story “down from the attic” and publish it for children forced to stay at home during the coronavirus lockdown.

    “My now teenagers were touchingly enthusiastic, so downstairs came the very dusty box, and for the last few weeks I’ve been immersed in a fictional world I thought I’d never enter again,” she said in a statement.

    Rowling said she would post the first two chapters on a dedicated website – www.theickabog.com – on Tuesday, with 34 further instalments released each weekday until July 10.

    She then intends to publish the story in English in November and other languages later on. All royalties will be given to projects assisting groups particularly affected by the pandemic.

    Written to be read aloud, “The Ickabog” is a story “in the fairy tale tradition” set in an imaginary land and aimed primarily at children aged between seven and nine.

    It is unrelated to any of Rowling’s other previous works, though she noted it was penned “in fits and starts” between her “Harry Potter” books.

    “‘The Ickabog’ is a story about truth and the abuse of power,” she said, adding it was not “intended to be read as a response to anything that’s happening in the world right now”.

    “The themes are timeless and could apply to any era or any country,” she said.

    The author is inviting budding young artists inspired by its “host of colourful characters and fast-paced plot” to illustrate the story and enter their artworks into a global competition being run by her publishers.

    The winners will have their drawings included in the published book in their part of the world.

    “Having decided to publish, I thought how wonderful it would be if children in lockdown, or otherwise needing distraction during the strange and difficult time we’re passing through, illustrated the story for me,” she said.

    Rowling added she wanted to see “imaginations run wild”.

    “Creativity, inventiveness and effort are the most important things: we aren’t necessarily looking for the most technical skill!” she said.

    Source: france24.com

  • Coronavirus: JK Rowling donates £1m to two charities

    JK Rowling, the creator of the Harry Potter adventures, is donating £1m to charities supporting vulnerable people during the lockdown.

    Half of the money will go to Crisis which helps homeless people, and half to Refuge to support victims of domestic abuse.

    Rowling’s donations come amid #HarryPotterDay on Twitter.

    Saturday also marks the anniversary of one the author’s major events in her stories.

    On Twitter, Rowling said: “Today’s the 22nd anniversary of the Battle of Hogwarts, but I am going to be honest and say that it feels inappropriate to talk about fictional deaths.

    “Too many people are losing loved ones in the real world.”

    Rowling, who wrote many of her Harry Potter stories while living in Edinburgh, said many vulnerable people who were homeless or in an abusive relationship were suffering at this time.

    Source: bbc.com