To state it more explicitly problem is that this is a set of not great role models.
If the issue is the set of role models, I submit that Hermione is the best role model in the book.
You can’t model yourself after Harry, redo your birth, and have a superhuman dark side to call on. Similarly, you can’t choose to have a university professor as a parent, who can serve as a role model to you in scientific method, and fully support your efforts in studying science. You can’t trade in your two dentist parents, who think your intelligence is “cute’, for parents who will respect and support your gifts.
But you can be diligent, hard working, honest, caring, and brave. You can do what is right. Though you won’t be as smart as Hermione, she is the best role model the book has to offer.
having a substantially weaker female lead is going to make it harder for them to identify with the characters,
Because it’s much easier to identify with a 10 year old with a superhuman dark side who wants minions and a sparkly throne. Much healthier too.
Role models in fictional works are by nature characters who are interesting more than they are perfect role models. No one wants to read a story about a character who is perfectly good, goes to classes every day, and never gets in trouble. The nature of role models is more subtle than simply being good. For a young child, they aren’t someone with magical talent, but they can still identify with characters with magical talent, and that’s easier when the character is of the same gender. (I remember at last year’s Vericon there was a panel on feminism and science-fiction and fantasy, and every single female author on the panel, including Tamora Pierce, expressed how much frustration they had growing up with the depiction of female characters, not just that they weren’t protagonists, but that when they were a side-kick or a secondary protagonist, how utterly boring they would be. This is a very old set of problems.)
If the issue is the set of role models, I submit that Hermione is the best role model in the book.
You can’t model yourself after Harry, redo your birth, and have a superhuman dark side to call on. Similarly, you can’t choose to have a university professor as a parent, who can serve as a role model to you in scientific method, and fully support your efforts in studying science. You can’t trade in your two dentist parents, who think your intelligence is “cute’, for parents who will respect and support your gifts.
But you can be diligent, hard working, honest, caring, and brave. You can do what is right. Though you won’t be as smart as Hermione, she is the best role model the book has to offer.
Because it’s much easier to identify with a 10 year old with a superhuman dark side who wants minions and a sparkly throne. Much healthier too.
Role models in fictional works are by nature characters who are interesting more than they are perfect role models. No one wants to read a story about a character who is perfectly good, goes to classes every day, and never gets in trouble. The nature of role models is more subtle than simply being good. For a young child, they aren’t someone with magical talent, but they can still identify with characters with magical talent, and that’s easier when the character is of the same gender. (I remember at last year’s Vericon there was a panel on feminism and science-fiction and fantasy, and every single female author on the panel, including Tamora Pierce, expressed how much frustration they had growing up with the depiction of female characters, not just that they weren’t protagonists, but that when they were a side-kick or a secondary protagonist, how utterly boring they would be. This is a very old set of problems.)