Hundreds of Harry Potter Fanatics Turn Salem, Massachusetts Into a Makeshift College Campus
Hundreds of Harry Potter fanatics have turned this historic seaport, best known for its witches and their trials, into a makeshift college campus fit for a young wizard.
In hotel ballrooms, professors from real-world universities led panel discussions with titles such as "Bucolic Bullionism: Economics in the Wizarding World," "Christianity and Harry Potter" and "Introduction to Spell Writing." While on the city's common, students braved rain showers over the weekend for a muddy game of Quidditch minus the floating broomsticks.
And fans dressed as Lord Voldemort, Draco Malfoy and, of course, Harry Potter drew stares from tourists as they wandered through the streets of Salem's historic district.
The "Witching Hour," a serious-minded symposium on all things Potter that opened last Thursday and was to end on Monday, suggests that adults may get as much from J.K. Rowling's series of novels as the children who line up at midnight whenever a new book hits stores.
The Potter books chronicle the life of Potter and his cohorts as they attend Hogwarts, a magical boarding school.
"Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince," the most recent volume, had sold 11 million copies in the United States as of September. Potter books have now been translated into 63 languages, most recently Farsi. Worldwide sales top $300 million.
The event is not sanctioned by Rowling or Warner Bros., which holds the movie rights. But its organizers, a Texas-based Harry Potter fan group called HP Education Fanon, Inc., brought the Witching Hour to Salem because the city is the only American location mentioned in any of the books.
That comes in "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," the fourth book in Rowling's seven-book series, when Harry meets members of the Salem Witches' Institute at the Quidditch World Cup.
"Salem is considered almost like a sacred place for fans of the books and the movies," said Carol Thistle, executive director of the city's tourism office.
Among those attending was actor Chris Rankin, who plays Percy Weasley in the three Potter films.
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