Harry Potter E A Ordem Da Fenix !!top!! -
Report on: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Thematic Core:
- Loss of Innocence: The book ends with Harry understanding that adults are fallible, that good people die, and that he is alone in the final fight.
- Anger vs. Love: Harry’s rage (at Sirius, Snape, the Ministry) nearly destroys him, but his love for his friends and his ability to teach the DA saves them.
- The Danger of Government Denial: Umbridge represents the banality of evil—bureaucratic cruelty that is just as dangerous as Voldemort’s violence.
Part 4: The Prophecy & The Fall (Climax)
- The Rescue Mission: Harry, Ron, Hermione, Ginny, Luna, and Neville fly to the Ministry of Magic on Thestrals. They race through the eerie Department of Mysteries—time rooms, brains in tanks, the Veil of Death.
- The Trap Revealed: They find the prophecy, but it’s a trap. Lucius Malfoy and a dozen Death Eaters surround them. The vision was fake, planted by Voldemort to lure Harry. The prophecy is about Harry and Voldemort: “Neither can live while the other survives.”
- The Battle of the Department of Mysteries: A brutal fight erupts. The DA members hold their own, but they are outmatched. Neville breaks his nose, Ron is brain-blasted, and Hermione is knocked out. Just as Malfoy prepares to kill Harry, the Order of the Phoenix arrives—Lupin, Moody, Tonks, and Sirius Black.
- The Death: In a chaotic duel, Bellatrix Lestrange cackles and blasts Sirius with a curse. He stumbles backward, falls through the Veil—a tattered black curtain on a stone dais—and disappears. He is gone. No body. No spell can bring him back. Harry screams and chases Bellatrix, screaming “CRUCIO!” but the curse fails. He cannot produce true evil.
3. Major Themes
| Theme | Description | |-------|-------------| | Institutional Corruption | The Ministry’s denial, propaganda, and use of Umbridge reflect how governments can suppress truth in the name of order. | | Anger and Isolation | Harry’s rage, PTSD-like symptoms, and feeling abandoned by Dumbledore are central to his arc. | | The Power of Truth | The DA represents grassroots education and resistance against lies. | | Sacrifice and Loss | Sirius’s death ends Harry’s hope for a family with a parental figure. | | Prophecy and Free Will | The prophecy (either must die at the hand of the other) raises questions of destiny vs. choice. |
1. O Verão e a Ordem da Fênix
O livro começa de forma tensa. Harry está frustrado e isolado em Little Whinging. Após o incidente com os Dementadores (e a expulsão de Hogwarts), ele é resgatado e levado para o Número 12, Grimmauld Place. harry potter e a ordem da fenix
- Conceito Chave: A Ordem da Fênix é uma sociedade secreta fundada por Dumbledore para lutar contra Voldemort e os Comensais da Morte.
- Personagem Novo: Nymphadora Tonks.
- O Juiz: Harry passa por um julgamento no Ministério para não ser expulso da escola.
Personagens de destaque
- Harry Potter: Mais vulnerável e impulsivo; sua luta interna é central.
- Hermione Granger: Estratégica e incansável na defesa dos direitos dos estudantes.
- Ron Weasley: Leal, mas lidando com ciúmes e inseguranças.
- Dolores Umbridge: Antagonista burocrática cuja crueldade vem revestida de formalidade.
- Sirius Black e membros da Ordem: Oferecem suporte e também representam custos emocionais e riscos reais.
Legado e Impacto Cultural
Harry Potter e a Ordem da Fênix é o livro onde a série para de tentar agradar crianças e começa a dialogar com adultos. Ele ensina que as instituições (Hogwarts, o Ministério) podem falhar, que os heróis podem estar errados e que a morte nem sempre é heroica ou tem sentido — às vezes, ela é apenas injusta. Report on: Harry Potter and the Order of
A adaptação cinematográfica de 2007, dirigida por David Yates, compactou a história, mas capturou a estética sombria do livro, apresentando pela primeira vez o Quartel-General da Ordem e a batalha no Departamento de Mistérios. No entanto, o filme precisou cortar muitas subtramas (como a de Quidditch e a relação complexa com a elfa Monique) que os leitores consideram essenciais. Loss of Innocence: The book ends with Harry
6. Significance in the Series
- Tone shift: The series becomes darker, more political, and psychologically complex. Humor still exists but is overshadowed by grief and war.
- Death of a father figure: Sirius’s death removes the last hope of a family for Harry, forcing him to accept that his true family is found (the Weasleys, Hermione, Ron).
- Ministry falls: After finally admitting Voldemort’s return, the Ministry’s credibility is shattered — setting up its takeover in Deathly Hallows.
- The prophecy: Reveals why Voldemort targeted Harry as a baby, but Dumbledore clarifies that the prophecy only matters because Harry and Voldemort choose to act on it.