Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 1, Winter 2014 | Page 81

Harry Potter and The Castle o f Otranto 77 Otranto, has not only taken sides but is actively working to restore their respective rightful owners. In no place is the notion of Hogwarts taking sides more clear than in the Battle of Hogwarts, where the castle actively defends students against Voldemort. Hogwarts provides many necessary items to aid the Order of the Phoenix but the most important are the statues in the corridors and the Room of Requirement. When Professor McGonagall learns from Harry that the castle is under attack, she warns the other professors and has a two pronged plan of action. First she must defend the school, and secondly she must find a way to evacuate the younger students from the building to remove them from harm’s way. To the first point, she enlists the aid of other professors but also of the castle itself Though she uses a spell to animate the statues located throughout the school, her instructions to them prove important. She commands: “Hogwarts is threatened! . . . Man the boundaries, do your duty to our school” {DH 602), at which point, “Clattering and yelling, the horde of moving statues stampeded past Harry” {DH 603). McGonagall’s command to the statues indicates that the school is in danger and the statues need no more information. Here the importance of education in the narrative is pointed out and calls attention to the fact that the castle is, first and foremost, a school and anything that threatens the school or the students is something the castle will attempt to expel. As important as the castle’s ability, via its statues and other items onsite, to defend itself is the true way it takes sides once again shown in the Room of Requirement. Though, as earlier noted, the room is able to allow the Death Eaters into the castle at the end of The Half-Blood Prince, it is through a vanishing cabinet that is hidden in the room rather than the room itself actively helping the Death Eaters. However, in the case of the Battle of Hogwarts, it is the room itself that provides safe passage for students to evacuate as well as for the Order of the Phoenix to come to the fight. This proves especially important because the Carrows have sealed off all the other secret passageways in and out of the castle and placed “curses over the entrances and Death Eaters and dementors waiting at the exits” {DH 572), which means that the Room of Requirement’s passage to the Hog’s Head proves the only safe passage in or out of the castle. Furthermore, that the Room of Requirement would open a passage to the Hog’s Head at all is worth noting. Though it is often mentioned in prior novels, the Hog’s Head seems at first glance an odd place for the room to connect to at all. It is not a favorite haunt of students, that honor belongs to The Three Broomsticks, nor does it play a