I like the idea that “Voldemort” was very consciously a role; that fits the Occlumens speech Quirrell gives to Harry.
But still, which is more plausible? That Voldemort’s violence was an optimal choice for the situation? Or that Voldemort was stupidly violent?
Quirrell uses the monastery story to argue Voldemort was stupidly violent, which at minimum implies Voldemort had a reputation consistent with stupid levels of violence. Dementor!Harry, which I read as a representation of Voldemort, thinks
The response to annoyance was killing.
which is about as stupidly violent as it gets.
Let’s put it this way: if Voldemort’s violence level was rationally chosen, the author’s worked really hard to disguise that fact.
The chapter emphasizes that it’s a separate personality system that’s running Harry at that point (which doesn’t prove it’s Voldemort, but is suggestive). E.g.:
that’s not Harry--
You know. About his dark side.
Although it’s not absolutely definitive; Dumbledore’s line in reply is
But this is beyond even that.
which argues for “he’s damaged” as you suggest rather than “he’s alien [and Voldemort]” as I’m suggesting.
Probably not optimal if he could go back and redo from start. But sometimes “good enough” is good enough. Shifting tactics in the middle of a war, to the extent of completely changing your public persona, when a lot of the loyalty of your followers (and the fear that keeps bystanders uninvolved) depends intimately on your existing persona, would not be easy at all.
I like the idea that “Voldemort” was very consciously a role; that fits the Occlumens speech Quirrell gives to Harry.
But still, which is more plausible? That Voldemort’s violence was an optimal choice for the situation? Or that Voldemort was stupidly violent?
Quirrell uses the monastery story to argue Voldemort was stupidly violent, which at minimum implies Voldemort had a reputation consistent with stupid levels of violence. Dementor!Harry, which I read as a representation of Voldemort, thinks
which is about as stupidly violent as it gets.
Let’s put it this way: if Voldemort’s violence level was rationally chosen, the author’s worked really hard to disguise that fact.
I believe Dementor!Harry was just damaged by the Dementor, producing both grotesquely negative motivations and poor impulse control.
The chapter emphasizes that it’s a separate personality system that’s running Harry at that point (which doesn’t prove it’s Voldemort, but is suggestive). E.g.:
Although it’s not absolutely definitive; Dumbledore’s line in reply is
which argues for “he’s damaged” as you suggest rather than “he’s alien [and Voldemort]” as I’m suggesting.
Look at results, though. Until whatever it was happened ten years ago, Voldemort was winning the war with those tactics.
Modulo Harry, those tactics were good enough – no doubt about that. But were they optimal?
Probably not optimal if he could go back and redo from start. But sometimes “good enough” is good enough. Shifting tactics in the middle of a war, to the extent of completely changing your public persona, when a lot of the loyalty of your followers (and the fear that keeps bystanders uninvolved) depends intimately on your existing persona, would not be easy at all.