neotoma: Neotoma albigula, the white-throated woodrat! [default icon] (Batman -- bale version)
neotoma ([personal profile] neotoma) wrote2006-09-10 09:06 pm
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Onto Batman...

so, [livejournal.com profile] sanj, [livejournal.com profile] ellen_fremedon and I were talking today as we walked from the Takoma Folk Festival, and the question came up of "what House does Batman sort into"?

[livejournal.com profile] ellen_fremedon brought up that you really have to take his personae into account here. There is 'Bruce Wayne the playboy', Batman, and the combination that is the real Bruce Wayne.

'Bruce Wayne', the silly role that Batman fronts to the world is, pretty much a Gryffindor in the eager-but-dim-puppy school. No one thinks he's dangerous, or even observant.

Batman, on the other hand, is an angry Ravenclaw. [livejournal.com profile] sanj was most firm on this -- *angry*, then Ravenclaw. Yojimbo was brought up for comparison.

The combined, *actual* personality of Bruce Wayne is, of course, Slytherin. Terrifyingly so.

Of course, we can't leave out Hufflepuff. That's Dick Grayson. And Superman. And Wonder Woman too, come to think of it.

Batman needs a lot of Hufflepuffs to sit on him, apparently.

[identity profile] sanj.livejournal.com 2006-09-11 02:21 am (UTC)(link)
Okay, I'm buying your Superman argument, though he's always seemed to be very Gryffindor to me: stereotypically so, which is how he and Batman come to so much grief with each other whenever Superman tries to use Metropolis tactics in Gotham.

Then again, your point that he not only founded the JLA, but convinced Batman to play on his team, is a very good one. Though I don't actually think there would be a gathering of the spandex crew's Major Players that Batman would miss, because that's too much concentrated potential power for -- he's got to get invited to the asskicking party keep an eye on it.

Tenacious loyalty, anyway, which puts him in either Hufflepuff or Gryffindor, depending on his reasons. I guess I just don't see him tending to work with and through other people as much as, say, Nightwing does, but he definitely fights because he identifies himself with a group of particular people -- and Luthor is his archenemy because he's trying to deny him of his humanity and his place with those people.

So, maybe, yeah. :)

[identity profile] neotoma.livejournal.com 2006-09-11 02:24 am (UTC)(link)
Well, there's also the bravery aspect. Superman's not really *brave* in the conventional sense; there's not much that can physically harm him on this *planet*.