Harry Potter - An ANTIFA Manual 1/3

The Harry Potter series is a political allegory of resistance to fascism and injustice. The Ministry’s corruption mirrors real authoritarian regimes, while the Order and D.A. embody revolution. Through diverse, oppressed characters, Rowling links personal struggle to collective resistance. Drawing on European history and modern wars, she exposes prejudice and power abuse. Her message: equality and solidarity are the strongest magic against tyranny.

CREATIVE PIECES

Brody L.

10/31/20255 min read

Brody L.

“Has J. K. Rowling woven political elements into the writing of Harry Potter?” is a long-standing debate in the fandom. I consider that question far too conservative. There is no coincidence, nor a halfway impulse in the writing—politics was there from the outset. Through rich social narratives and deft magical metaphors, the themes of “resistance”, “censorship”, “purge”, and “revolution” run like a red thread. In this essay, I will show—via the fates of the characters, the narrative structure, European traditions, and real-world allegory—how Rowling consistently foregrounds an anti-fascist message in her fantasy.

Preface: The Unwritten Revolution

Certain events must have taken place. Yet Rowling never states them outright. Take, for instance, a revolution. In Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, the wizarding community undergoes a revolution: the Order of the Phoenix and Dumbledore's Army launch an armed uprising. And the puppet regime—The Ministry of Magic was toppled. Such an outcome is not only logically plausible; it is almost inevitable. By then, the Ministry had lost its last shred of legitimacy, leaving no room for compromise with the Phoenix.

So why does one get the sense that “Voldemort was gone, everything went back to normal”? That is thanks to Rowling’s narrative finesse. She focuses our attention on the Phoenix versus the Death Eaters, never depicting the direct clash between the protagonists and the state’s coercive apparatus, even though such a clash must logically have occurred. The only way to explain this narrative gap is to recognise that the post-Voldemort Ministry is not the same government as before. The members and allies of the Phoenix and D.A. now occupy the halls of power—that is, the revolutionary government. The new Ministry officials, Harry and Hermione among them, still see their children off on Platform 9¾.

But how did the Ministry’s legitimacy collapse? Was it merely because of appeasement toward Voldemort or failure to resist? No. Sirius Black, a war hero, was imprisoned in Azkaban without trial; Harry, still a minor, was hauled before a criminal court for a school-rule violation; Voldemort managed a coup with a single Imperius Curse… Such details make plain that the Ministry was long since infiltrated.

There are many darker aspects of the Ministry that Rowling doesn’t describe—but readers can imagine that its repression of Dumbledore’s supporters went far beyond “interfering with education”, “censoring textbooks and newspapers”, or “waging a propaganda war”. Taking a fifteen-year-old to criminal court for a school infraction signals tacit approval of state violence—through the judiciary—to crush the Dumbledore faction. In other words, the Ministry began losing legitimacy well before Voldemort’s coup; the White Terror likely commenced at the close of Goblet of Fire.

The Fates of the Characters: Death Is Inevitable

As Rowling wrote, the novel’s overall tone shifted gradually. Cedric’s death marks the turning point: the series abandons its adolescent lightness and turns serious, even dark. What makes Harry Potter unique among popular young-adult fiction is its insistently social plot structure—one that, in some respects, outstrips certain adult novels.

In most modern romance, children’s, or YA books, history and society remain mere backdrops. The narrative centres on individual concerns—friendship, love, growth, death—as personal milestones. In Harry Potter, however, these “private” struggles are bound up inextricably with the broader social order.

The Weasleys, though pure-blood, live in genteel poverty; Hermione, as a bright witch of Muggle parentage, endures prejudice and social scorn; Harry himself grows up a servant-slave in the Dursleys’ home. Their friendship springs not only from youthful camaraderie but also from the shared burdens of oppression. As the plot progressed, their individual emotional choices quickly evolved into a collective action against fascism. The friendship between Harry and Cedric could grace any children’s tale—but Cedric’s death becomes an unmistakable emblem of political protest.

Rowling stands apart from her contemporaries in that she does not shrink from killing off her characters. Though, in theory, today’s mass-market novelists under the sway of neoliberalism likewise feel free to dispatch characters, they tend to favour “accidents” over waves of political martyrdom. And even when figures in such works are destined for sacrifice; authors habitually strip the death of its political meaning.

Long ago, critics like Terry Eagleton, Slavoj Žižek, and Giorgio Agamben observed that bourgeois literature delights in tracing what they call the “moral grey zone”—using human frailty to deconstruct firm political commitments, wrapping everything in the language of peace, tolerance, reason, and diversity. They fear admitting that “someone might actually be right” because doing so would entail conceding that “others might very well be wrong”. Rowling, by contrast, understands clearly that forgiveness is a Christian virtue—you forgive sinners, but you shall not embrace sin.

Every death in Rowling’s saga reveals an unambiguous perpetrator: fascists (the Death Eaters), landlords (the upper-class pure-blood families), inept bureaucrats (the Ministry), or the philistine petty bourgeoisie (the unscrupulous tabloids)—all embodiments of social evil that cannot be denied.

Even the most “sudden” losses—Sirius’s fall through the veil, Cedric’s death in the graveyard—have precise causes: they perish under fascist claws and the complicit cowardice of the existing regime. Harry’s fiercest clashes with authority stem from his refusal to let Cedric’s death slip from memory. Sirius himself declares there must be “something worth dying for, something more important than life.” Throughout the series, memorials—from the Mirror of Erised to the Phoenix’s photographs to epitaphs and fresh flowers on tombstones—serve to remind the living who died and by whose hand.

Under a neoliberal narrative, Harry and Neville might have been steered toward a shrink; Rowling instead arms them with the Sword of Gryffindor. The pivotal question is never “Can you heal and reintegrate?” but “Can you recall the wound and still carry on the fight?”

Rowling delights in portraying each martyr’s full humanity, not as a way to dilute their political sacrifice but to magnify it. Their human complexity enhances, not diminishes, the strength of their convictions. In liberal storytelling, such nuance often leads to moral relativism; in Rowling’s hands, it forges moral clarity.

Harry Potter, going further by dismissing moral neutrality, embeds its characters squarely within a broader social framework. The systemic problems that pervade wizarding society mirror those of the real world.

Though the series alludes to racial discrimination in our world, it eliminates all such prejudice within its pages. Its moral pillars are drawn from diverse backgrounds: Albus Dumbledore is gay and also the school’s finest teacher; Kingsley Shacklebolt —the first postwar Minister of Magic and the only one portrayed positively—is Black, at a time when real-world leadership remained almost exclusively white and male; Minerva McGonagall, who leads in the Battle of Hogwarts and duels both Severus Snape and Tom Riddle, is a woman, even as real-world conservatives still argue whether women belong in combat; Alastor “Mad-Eye” Moody, the first-ever Auror, is disabled; Severus Snape is a grimy, unpopular bookworm; the Weasley family, the warmest of hearths, lives in genteel poverty; and two generations of top students—Lily Potter and Hermione Granger—are female. Neville Longbottom, long dismissed as the worst student in his year, sustains Dumbledore’s Army after the Trio departs, and openly defies Voldemort; Harry Potter himself—an orphan deprived of love—saves the world. His Yule Ball date is Indian, his first love is Chinese, and Ginny’s ex-boyfriend is Black.

This diverse range of character choices subverts prevailing societal stereotypes on their head. The author’s intent is clear: not mere “political correctness”, but a bold, unapologetic “why not?”.

It also explains why Rowling spares Draco Malfoy’s life. Far-right families often indoctrinate their children into extremism; indeed, several Death Eater surnames endure across generations in the series, highlighting this very social issue. Draco commits grievous wrongs—insulting and nearly murdering others out of pure-blood arrogance—yet ultimately renounces pure-blood supremacy, and that renunciation suffices.

From beginning to end, Rowling uses the Harry Potter saga to articulate her political convictions and moral vision, to recount history’s warnings and continuities, and to sketch the just society and government she hopes for. Politics in Harry Potter is far

from a mere embellishment; it is the scaffolding of the story. The magical trappings exist simply to colour a narrative of civil rights and resistance.