“Snacks”…
[Morty:] What am I eating?
[Bird person:] It’s mostly debris I found in my carpet. I don’t know what humans eat.
[Tammy, his girlfriend:] You know what this human eats.
Don’t be gross, Tammy.
Fuck Tammy
Never ask a Hobbit what they got in their pocketses. Bad time will be had by all.
Luckily the words “male”, “female” and “non-binary” exist
“Are you a man or a woman?”
“I’m a Hobbit.”
“What gender are you?”
“Hungry.”
“Yeah, but what’s in your pants?”
“FOOOOOD!”
Imagine sitting around thinking about hobbit dick all day. Like…idk if you’re failing or winning hardcore…
What do they use for other races? Or do they just avoid gender entirely?
it’s LOTR so they mostly avoid women entirely
Pretty much everything except for white men. Except for bad guys. Those can be brown/muslim
Edit because some people are dull af
Not sure why this is being down-voted; you’re absolutely on point when it comes to Tolkien’s writing
Lol not only that you can Google it and you can find countless sites telling the same thing. I’m being downvoted because all it takes is a single downvote the rest just follow blindly. Another reason could be that people here are mostly white and that’s why they don’t see it.
Here’s one of those articles
I mean, I’m all for contextualizing Tolkien, and I’ll grant that many of his contemporaries were far more overtly racist (cough Lovecraft cough), but it’s still pretty hard to justify passages from his private letters that describe orcs as
squat, broad, flat-nosed, sallow-skinned, with wide mouths and slant eyes: in fact degraded and repulsive versions of the (to Europeans) least lovely Mongol-types
Edit: here’s the Wikipedia source that describes the issue in fairly nuanced terms
Him being better than some contemporaries isn’t great. Still, the stories are good and generally you can take other messages from them that are decent. Like Éowyn fighting with the men despite being told her duty is elsewhere, despite Tolkien being misogynistic. He wouldn’t take out of the story the modern interpretation (even though the story that certainly inspired this is about a woman who literally becomes a man after all of this), but he himself said that readers should and will take things from the story that he didn’t intend, and that’s good.
I don’t have any particular issues with Tolkien besides that he wasn’t socially creative enough to see beyond what he knew, but that’s true for most people. He wrote fun, interesting, creative tales within that that generally have a hopeful uplifting message. However, we should always be critical of any creator of any work. We should strive to solve issues and point out flaws in order to improve our world. It can’t change the past, but it can change the future.
Mongol-type or Mongoloid are terms that described Down’s Syndrome iirc. I don’t think it’s being used in a racial context beyond the obvious modern problems with those terms.
I think it’s pretty obvious from the rest of the sentence that Tolkien is explicitly using "Mongol-type"as a racial descriptor; “sallow” is referring to skin color, “slanted eyes” speaks for itself, and the fact that he explicitly references European beauty standards are all providing contextual evidence that Tolkien is using Eastern Asians as the physical model for orcs
I mean, yeah, you’re coming to a small community of LOTR fans and accusing the author of their fandom of being racist. I’m not sure what you expect lol.
But yeah there are some dubiously racist characterizations in the novels. There are also some moments of reflection, like Sam seeing the dead Harad soldier:
He was glad that he could not see the dead face. He wondered what the man’s name was and where he came from; and if he was really evil of heart, or what lies or threats had led him on the long march from his home.
I mean, the book is written from a Western POV, and by a white Catholic guy who was born in the late 1800s. I think the chances were pretty slim of him having a modern outlook on race, gender, sexuality, etc.
Edit: omg on midwest.social too hahaha
I guess LOTR fans follow that example as well /s
The masculine is orc.
The feminine is yer mum.
They literally use men to refer to the entire race of humans multiple times…
Literally call it the race of men/man several times. Does that technically make Eowyn genderfluid or just paradoxical since she is both a man in the sense of race but also states herself that she isn’t a man?
The “werman” counterpart to “woman” would have been really useful for writing fantasy stories with multiple sapient species if it had ever been used. Or if we all started using it now.
I mean, one of the more quoted lines in LOTR is a human woman telling the Nazgul Witch King “I am no … man.” The film quote is shorter and more direct but the book still has Eowyn telling the witch kind she isn’t a man. So there are men and women but also man is used to describe humans.
Just like regular Earth human English!