Wednesday, July 4, 2018

What are great examples of irony in the J.K. Rowling used in her first book?

There are
three types of : dramatic, situational and verbal.  Situational irony is when something happens
that is not what you expect.

One of the biggest examples of irony does not
become entirely clear until later.  This is that Severus Snape is charged with protecting Harry
even though Harry was the son of his enemy in school.  Harry and his friends assume that Snape
is out to get Harry.  For example, when they see Snape keeping eye contact and mouthing a spell
at the Quidditch match, they assume that he and not Quirrel is trying to hurt Harry.  Snape is
actually trying to protecting Harry.

Dramatic irony is when the reader knows
something that the characters do not.  In this case, the reader realizes that there must be some
kind of history between Snape and Harry, or Snape would not be acting like this.  Harry, on the
other hand, just assumes that Snape is mean to him and does not really know why.


A final example of irony is Hagrid and Fluffy.  Hagrid tells a stranger that the way to
tame Fluffy is to use music.  He tells this story to the children when they visit him.  Quirrel
uses what he learns to get past the dog, so the children do not have to use this skill.  It is
also unusual and unexpected that each task plays to the strengths of one of the children.  The
potion test, the flying keys, and the chess game are all designed so that one of the children
can use his or her ability when the others could not.

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