… Has it occurred to you that “fanfiction” and “original story” may not be sharply delineated categories? Cases in point: every major story from before the Age of Copyright, like the Greek myths or the King Arthur legends or the Robin Hood stories. Pick two versions a couple centuries apart and you’ll find changes way more drastic than this one, and yet you can’t pick out a version in the chain joining them that wouldn’t qualify as fanfiction of the earlier versions.
All that you say is true, and irrelevant. HPMoR is both an original story and, at the same time, a reflection on another author’s story (fanfiction). I believe Eliezer doesn’t change things (that happened before the story’s beginning), and general facts about the universe, without having a specific reason in mind. This makes it more focused and easier to read for people familiar with canon (the target audience).
A change to the universe that made prophecies in general not true/real, would be so big that it would thematically deserve to be the subject of its own story. In this story, the big change is everyone’s intelligence, and we get to see how the smarter characters react differently to the same world as in the original story. In my opinion, a story that eventually revealed that “prophecies don’t really exist and are always cons”—when even a character like Quirrel believes in them—would be in the same class as a story that eventually revealed that “magic doesn’t really exist, it’s all sufficiently advanced technology controlled by aliens who are the real mastermind, villain, and Harry ends up teaming with Voldemort to defeat them”. It might be a good story, but it’s not a Harry Potter story.
Maybe it’s just an inherent constraint of writing a Harry Potter fic.
In other words, you’re talking about what makes a fic a Harry Potter fic, not about what HPMoR is about.
a story that eventually revealed that “prophecies don’t really exist and are always cons” … would be in the same class as a story that eventually revealed that “magic doesn’t really exist, it’s all sufficiently advanced technology controlled by aliens who are the real mastermind, villain, and Harry ends up teaming with Voldemort to defeat them”. It might be a good story, but it’s not a Harry Potter story.
In other words, a story where Arthur is king of Britain rather than a supernatural adventurer isn’t an Arthur story. A story where Merlin is a major character isn’t an Arthur story. A story where Mordred is actually an alien isn’t an Arthur story.
What I’m saying here is that you’re drawing a line in the sand between “Harry Potter stories” and “not Harry Potter stories”, but that line doesn’t correspond to any kind of sharp division in the real world.
Like most human categorizations, it’s a simplification. There’s no line in the sand, but there’s a rough gradient or spectrum stretching from stories not related to HP at all, through stories with similar themes that make people think of HP (but don’t explicitly make the connection in the text), through stories that use the HP names and characters and settings but change events drastically from the series (like this HP and the Wastelands of Time), through stories that change fewer things (like HPMOR), and ending with some that stick to canon as much as possible.
This isn’t about what stories “deserve” to be called “true HP fanfiction”. That would end up as a No True Scotsman fallacy. My original wording was poorly chosen in that it made you (plural) think I meant something like this.
Rather, what I’m saying is: the story up till now has been consistent in terms of lying in a particular location on this spectrum. It has been consistently presented and written that way. If, now, in a new chapter, we found out that prophecies don’t really exist and are all faked, that would be an idea typical on a story at a very different location along that spectrum. It would conflict with the story so far. Readers would not enjoy it. It would be bad storytelling. Therefore I believe with high probability such a thing will not be revealed in HPMOR.
… Has it occurred to you that “fanfiction” and “original story” may not be sharply delineated categories? Cases in point: every major story from before the Age of Copyright, like the Greek myths or the King Arthur legends or the Robin Hood stories. Pick two versions a couple centuries apart and you’ll find changes way more drastic than this one, and yet you can’t pick out a version in the chain joining them that wouldn’t qualify as fanfiction of the earlier versions.
All that you say is true, and irrelevant. HPMoR is both an original story and, at the same time, a reflection on another author’s story (fanfiction). I believe Eliezer doesn’t change things (that happened before the story’s beginning), and general facts about the universe, without having a specific reason in mind. This makes it more focused and easier to read for people familiar with canon (the target audience).
A change to the universe that made prophecies in general not true/real, would be so big that it would thematically deserve to be the subject of its own story. In this story, the big change is everyone’s intelligence, and we get to see how the smarter characters react differently to the same world as in the original story. In my opinion, a story that eventually revealed that “prophecies don’t really exist and are always cons”—when even a character like Quirrel believes in them—would be in the same class as a story that eventually revealed that “magic doesn’t really exist, it’s all sufficiently advanced technology controlled by aliens who are the real mastermind, villain, and Harry ends up teaming with Voldemort to defeat them”. It might be a good story, but it’s not a Harry Potter story.
First paragraph: Irrelevant.
In other words, you’re talking about what makes a fic a Harry Potter fic, not about what HPMoR is about.
In other words, a story where Arthur is king of Britain rather than a supernatural adventurer isn’t an Arthur story. A story where Merlin is a major character isn’t an Arthur story. A story where Mordred is actually an alien isn’t an Arthur story.
What I’m saying here is that you’re drawing a line in the sand between “Harry Potter stories” and “not Harry Potter stories”, but that line doesn’t correspond to any kind of sharp division in the real world.
Something about reading this as it relates to fanfiction makes me smirk.
Implying that fanfiction is not written in the real world.
Like most human categorizations, it’s a simplification. There’s no line in the sand, but there’s a rough gradient or spectrum stretching from stories not related to HP at all, through stories with similar themes that make people think of HP (but don’t explicitly make the connection in the text), through stories that use the HP names and characters and settings but change events drastically from the series (like this HP and the Wastelands of Time), through stories that change fewer things (like HPMOR), and ending with some that stick to canon as much as possible.
This isn’t about what stories “deserve” to be called “true HP fanfiction”. That would end up as a No True Scotsman fallacy. My original wording was poorly chosen in that it made you (plural) think I meant something like this.
Rather, what I’m saying is: the story up till now has been consistent in terms of lying in a particular location on this spectrum. It has been consistently presented and written that way. If, now, in a new chapter, we found out that prophecies don’t really exist and are all faked, that would be an idea typical on a story at a very different location along that spectrum. It would conflict with the story so far. Readers would not enjoy it. It would be bad storytelling. Therefore I believe with high probability such a thing will not be revealed in HPMOR.
In which case, I totally misunderstood what you were saying. Never mind.