• anonymous_ascendent [none/use name]
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    4 years ago

    Tolkien can say whatever he wants but the tropes and allegories and real world parallels are clear as day. Evil dark skinned southerners? Untrustworthy elitist wizards in ivory towers who will betray you to the invading dark hordes? Orcs as evil dark skinned muscular creatures who threaten the idyllic white countryside. The rural perfect shire destroyed by machines and industry. Dwarves who have big noses and go mad for treasure and gold?

    I mean come on it’s pretty obvious that he had absorbed some real shit from his racist colonialist society whether he knew it or not

    I do like the books, and I do like some of the themes (destroying the ring of power instead of abusing it, the decline of human civilization)

    • SteveHasBunker [he/him]
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      4 years ago

      Dwarves who have big noses and go mad for treasure and gold?

      Did Tolkien ever explicately state they were an allegory for Jews? cuz if not I’ve never thought that made much sense.

      Yes Dwarves love gold and jewels, but they also mine those gold and jewels themselves with pickaxes and swole dwarf arms, and they’re also known for being stubborn and aggressive and love drinking and fighting. Jews are usually stereotyped as physically weak and so have to rely on schemes and trickery to thrive. I don’t see many antisemetic 4chan memes of Jews drinking tankards of ale after a long day of smelting battle axes, or fantasy books where Dwarves use loan sharking scheme to destabilize a Goblin kingdom.

      • Uncle [he/him]
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        4 years ago

        Did Tolkien ever explicately state they were an allegory for Jews?

        He absolutely did, yes. The dwarvish language of Khuzdul is even based on Hebrew. It wasn't intended to be a denigrating comparison, though. The dwarves were the heroes in The Hobbit.

        • invalidusernamelol [he/him]
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          4 years ago

          I always saw the dwarves as the proletarians of middle earth. Hobbits were kinda peasants and elves were the inteligista.

      • anonymous_ascendent [none/use name]
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        4 years ago

        Allegories and metaphors aren’t usually 1:1

        Also, anti-Semitic stereotypes in the early 20th century are different than today. There was indeed stereotypes of them being good at wrestling and fighting, being unhygienic and unshaven & short.

        It’s a feudal society, it wouldn’t make much sense for dwarves to have complex financial schemes. They do get mentioned as hoarders and stealers though, and their greed attracts a dragon which the humans have to fight off for them.

        • SteveHasBunker [he/him]
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          4 years ago

          There was indeed stereotypes of them being good at wrestling and fighting, being unhygienic and unshaven & short.

          Really? That's pretty stark contrast to the stereotypes of Jews I encounter today, usually they're portrayed as kinda nerdy, orderly and necrotic, "smelly bearded wrestler" isn't really what pops into my head when I think of Jews.

          Edit: Also didn't the idea of Jews being bankers come from the fact there were one of the few people who were doing banking in the feudal era? I've never known Jews to be associated with mining or metallurgy so that element of the dwarves is weird.

          • YouKnowIt [he/him]
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            4 years ago

            Yeah, something about usury laws I think.

            I don't know why you guys are acting like Tolkien invented dwarves. He cribbed them from Norse and German mythology basically wholesale. They were already an established thing, short, mythologically good at smithing, often insular and hostile.