She’s mentioned in at least three chapters. In chapter 12 Quirrell describes her as the “quote undying unquote Baba Yaga”. (To my knowledge she’s not mentioned at all by Rowling.) The Law of Conservation of Detail tells us that she is going to be plot-relevant somehow.
(To my knowledge she’s not mentioned at all by Rowling.)
I can never see references to her without amusement. Bear in mind that the “canonical” Baba Yaga of Russian folklore is a cantankerous old witch who hobbles around with one leg made of bone, lives in a hut on chicken legs, and uses a giant mortar and pestle as her transport of choice. Such a character would make the likes of Hagrid and Moody seem wholly pedestrian.
Eliezer’s re-imagining of her as a Dark Lady, meanwhile, just summons the most fantastic mental images.
Maybe the author has read some theory on Russian folclore. Курьи ножки might not be chicken’s legs; some scholars think курьи means ‘made from smoke’ and so BY’s hut is actually a portal between worlds (between the world of the living, where the hero comes from, and the world where Koschey the Immortal lives—Koschey, incidentally, has something of a Horcrux—a needle hidden very thoroughly, and if you break it, he dies.)
Also, Harry’s Pet Rock was mentioned twice, so I’ve got a theory: Harry’s original Pet Rock, Harry’s father’s rock, and the Philosopher’s Stone are all the same rock. It would be really ironic.
I’ve suspected Baba Yaga would be dramatically revealed since the sentence I read her name. Since then there’s been no shortage of evidence which can be somehow contorted to confirm my theory.
EY has made a habit of throwing references to other fanfics in HPMOR. For example, David Monroe is a character in A Black Comedy. Baba Yaga appears in many fanfics, most famously in Turn Me Loose: A Harry Potter Adventure, where she is an immortal Dark Lady.
For example, David Monroe is a character in A Black Comedy.
And also a character in MoR. As are various ponies.
Baba Yaga appears in many fanfics, most famously in Turn Me Loose: A Harry Potter Adventure, where she is an immortal Dark Lady.
So by your examples’ logic, we should expect Baba Yaga to show up as a character in MoR, possibly not as an immortal Dark Lady but maybe a mortal Dark Lord.
If I understand ikacer’s theory correctly, it is that:
David Monroe’s name may be a reference to a piece of fiction Eliezer likes, but that doesn’t mean that his name will be of relevance to the plot. It is entirely credible that this name was included solely as a reference.
The existence of immortal Dark Lady Baba Yaga may be a reference to a piece of fiction Eliezer likes, but that doesn’t mean that her existence will be of relevance to the plot. It is entirely credible that she was mentioned to exist solely as a reference, and this is more probable than solipsist’s theory.
David Monroe’s name may be a reference to a piece of fiction Eliezer likes, but that doesn’t mean that his name will be of relevance to the plot.
My point was that the Monroe example and the ponies show that references play roles in the plot, so even if a character once named ‘Baba Yaga’ shows up, we wouldn’t necessarily expect her/him to act exactly like the Baba Yaga in the other fic, in the same way Monroe doesn’t play the same role or the ponies play the same role in MLP, but nevertheless, the character has to do something and at this stage in MoR, there’s no room for frivolity or introducing a new character just for a throwaway gag, and all the foreshadowing suggests that the new role/character will be important—in the same way that Monroe was important for Quirrelmort’s backstory and current nature.
But now you’re expanding the set of examples… My point was mostly that his set of examples did not support his claim like he thought they did. What he should have done is not brought up Monroe etc, but the Elric brothers, Death Note, Shea etc and argued that there were many more allusions which were just allusions than there were foreshadowing of future characters and hence an allusion or two to Baba Yaga still left the probability of a future appearance at a risible 1% or something.
I agree completely, from an outside point of view. For example, there was a shoutout in the very sentence Baba Yaga was introduced.
Past Professors of Defence have included not just the legendary wandering hero Harold Shea but also the quote undying unquote Baba Yaga, yes, I see some of you are still shuddering at the sound of her name even though she’s been dead for six hundred years.
I claim Baba Yaga is important and Harold Shea is a decoy. Yes, I also think my hypothesis sounds arbitrary and a bit crazy.
Why Baba Yaga?
She’s mentioned in at least three chapters. In chapter 12 Quirrell describes her as the “quote undying unquote Baba Yaga”. (To my knowledge she’s not mentioned at all by Rowling.) The Law of Conservation of Detail tells us that she is going to be plot-relevant somehow.
I can never see references to her without amusement. Bear in mind that the “canonical” Baba Yaga of Russian folklore is a cantankerous old witch who hobbles around with one leg made of bone, lives in a hut on chicken legs, and uses a giant mortar and pestle as her transport of choice. Such a character would make the likes of Hagrid and Moody seem wholly pedestrian.
Eliezer’s re-imagining of her as a Dark Lady, meanwhile, just summons the most fantastic mental images.
Maybe the author has read some theory on Russian folclore. Курьи ножки might not be chicken’s legs; some scholars think курьи means ‘made from smoke’ and so BY’s hut is actually a portal between worlds (between the world of the living, where the hero comes from, and the world where Koschey the Immortal lives—Koschey, incidentally, has something of a Horcrux—a needle hidden very thoroughly, and if you break it, he dies.)
I’ll add “The Massacre of Albania in the Fifteenth Century”, a book title which triggered my brain’s foreshadowing alarm in chapter 26.
The “undying” Witch Formerly Known As Baba Yaga has gone by many names, including Nicholas Flamel.
Also, Harry’s Pet Rock was mentioned twice, so I’ve got a theory: Harry’s original Pet Rock, Harry’s father’s rock, and the Philosopher’s Stone are all the same rock. It would be really ironic.
She appears in the Prisoner of Azkaban video game.
As a little info card, according to a wikia entry, no? Not much of an appearance even for a distant licensing spinoff.
I’ve suspected Baba Yaga would be dramatically revealed since the sentence I read her name. Since then there’s been no shortage of evidence which can be somehow contorted to confirm my theory.
I have some evidence opposing your theory.
EY has made a habit of throwing references to other fanfics in HPMOR. For example, David Monroe is a character in A Black Comedy. Baba Yaga appears in many fanfics, most famously in Turn Me Loose: A Harry Potter Adventure, where she is an immortal Dark Lady.
Isn’t Baba Yaga a folk tale character?
1) Baba Yaga, an existing fictional character, appears in a fanfic as an immortal Dark Lady.
2) Eliezer Yudkowsky makes a reference to the Baba Yaga from that fanfic in his own work.
And also a character in MoR. As are various ponies.
So by your examples’ logic, we should expect Baba Yaga to show up as a character in MoR, possibly not as an immortal Dark Lady but maybe a mortal Dark Lord.
If I understand ikacer’s theory correctly, it is that:
David Monroe’s name may be a reference to a piece of fiction Eliezer likes, but that doesn’t mean that his name will be of relevance to the plot. It is entirely credible that this name was included solely as a reference.
The existence of immortal Dark Lady Baba Yaga may be a reference to a piece of fiction Eliezer likes, but that doesn’t mean that her existence will be of relevance to the plot. It is entirely credible that she was mentioned to exist solely as a reference, and this is more probable than solipsist’s theory.
My point was that the Monroe example and the ponies show that references play roles in the plot, so even if a character once named ‘Baba Yaga’ shows up, we wouldn’t necessarily expect her/him to act exactly like the Baba Yaga in the other fic, in the same way Monroe doesn’t play the same role or the ponies play the same role in MLP, but nevertheless, the character has to do something and at this stage in MoR, there’s no room for frivolity or introducing a new character just for a throwaway gag, and all the foreshadowing suggests that the new role/character will be important—in the same way that Monroe was important for Quirrelmort’s backstory and current nature.
But why would you not expect Baba Yaga to be like, say, the Elric brothers, mentioned solely as background detail?
But now you’re expanding the set of examples… My point was mostly that his set of examples did not support his claim like he thought they did. What he should have done is not brought up Monroe etc, but the Elric brothers, Death Note, Shea etc and argued that there were many more allusions which were just allusions than there were foreshadowing of future characters and hence an allusion or two to Baba Yaga still left the probability of a future appearance at a risible 1% or something.
Ah, now I see. I didn’t understand that this is what you were driving at in previous posts. Thanks for the clarification.
I agree completely, from an outside point of view. For example, there was a shoutout in the very sentence Baba Yaga was introduced.
I claim Baba Yaga is important and Harold Shea is a decoy. Yes, I also think my hypothesis sounds arbitrary and a bit crazy.