Volume 83, September 2015, Pages 174–179
Harry Potter and the measures of personality: Extraverted Gryffindors, agreeable Hufflepuffs, clever Ravenclaws, and manipulative Slytherins
Abstract
People use fiction and storytelling to learn about themselves and their social world. Fans of J.K. Rowling’s popular Harry Potter
book series often identify with one of the four Hogwarts school
communities or “houses”—Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, and
Slytherin—that correspond to characters’ specific traits. Fans use a
feature on Rowling’s “Pottermore” website that tests their personality
and sorts them into the Hogwarts house that best fits them. But what
does Pottermore’s sorting quiz measure? We asked fans from online Harry Potter
groups into which Hogwarts house they had been sorted on Pottermore.
Fans then completed personality measures, including the Big Five traits,
need to belong, need for cognition, and the Dark Triad
traits—narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy. Planned contrasts
found positive associations between need for cognition and placement in
Ravenclaw (known for wit and learning), and between the Dark Triad
traits and placement in Slytherin (known for using any means to achieve
their ends). We expected—but did not find—that those in Gryffindor
(known for bravery) would be higher in extraversion and openness, and
that Hufflepuffs (known for loyalty) would be higher on need to belong.
Our findings suggest that fiction can reflect real underlying
personality dimensions.
Keywords
- Dark Triad;
- Harry Potter;
- Psychopathy;
- Narcissism;
- Machiavellianism;
- Need for cognition;
- Need to belong;
- Big Five
Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Ltd. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.