Char-Nobyl said:
I'll just slip in my text in bold for the sake of not re-quoting each it me I want to make a minor comment.
8-Bit_Jack said:
...you've never played the Elder Scrolls before, have you?
Lets see, racial stereotypes include
khajiit: sneaky, drug-addled, thieving liars Sounds about right. It certainly doesn't help that skooma is made from a Elsweyr-exclussive crop.
argonians: lizard ents, obviously they are stupid I didn't pick up 'stupid' so much as just 'animals.' Sorta more insulting that way: it's hatred in spite of acknowledging intelligence and the like.
dunmer: aristocratic, backward, ancestor-worshipping lying slavers and drug dealers The main stereotypes I saw of them were treacherous, magically-inclined, and prone to daedra worship.
altmer: arrogant, supremacist bastards (and now some of them are full-on nazis) Well, it certainly doesn't help that the Thalmor government banned the worship of Talos based solely on the belief that no human could ever join the ranks of the Divines.
orsimer: raging, drooling, ignorant barbarians Yep. Though more of a barbarian-savant: no one seems to deny the quality of orcish smithing.
Nords: DRUNKEN ignorant barbarians Nothing much to add here.
Redguards: savages I think it's more 'baffling foreigner' than outright 'savages.' They're human, but their customs are nonetheless alien to Imperials/Bretons/Nords.
bosmer: untrustworthy, flighty, thieving cowards Yeah, more or less.
Imperials: arrogant, lazy, weak, greedy. Arrogant and greedy, definitely, but I think 'weak' only applies to the Empire as a whole, seeing as it's struggling to hold itself together.
escapists, what am I forgetting?
Angerwing said:
The only race you missed were Bretons. I'd say they're considered somewhat similar to Imperials, just even weaker as they're all thought of as mages.
I recall one of the Nord slurs for them being 'chinless,' which sorta makes sense. They tend to have naturally less pronounced jawlines than Imperials and Nords.
Then there's the dwemer, who most people assume are stereotypical dwarves rather than basically bearded elves. I think werewolves and vampires can qualify as nearly having 'racial' status at this point. The Companions were proof enough of werewolves being ultimately human, yet the disciples of the
god of mercy dedicate themselves to eradicating them.
You know your stuff. This pleases me.
The chinless thing ties into the whole 'milk-drinking pansy' idea. Have a pronounced jawline is a classic sign of an 'alpha male' in media, and saying someone is chinless has been an insult for the upper class. Bretons are half Altmer, racially, and the Altmer are a very arrogant, aristocratic race. The Bretons would catch some splashback from this from the Nordic population. Ironically, the Altmer have always had outrageous chins in the Elder Scrolls series.
The dwarves are a huge mystery to most, enough that they haven't really got any stereotypes (rather, rough understanding). The mystery is compounded by the entire race (barring the one corprus-ridden dwarf in Morrowind) leaving at once, to a place nobody knows. They have written records, and a few visual representations (assuming the Centurions represent the Dwemer), but the knowledge about the Dwemer is too vague to really understand anything about them. You can tell by the anthropological annotations in the Marobar Sul tales. One tale (can't recall the name) mentioned a dwarven smith making a 'Calling' to his dwarven leader. Are dwarves psychic in some way? Nobody knows. Basically, the only ways common people see the Dwemer are 'Good smiths, extremely smart, love traps and contraptions, all disappeared'.
As for the werewolves and vampires, I'd definitely agree with you. The werewolves are able to control their bloodlust, and even can choose to forgo it completely. The only reason some of the Companions choose to turn in to wolves is because they rationally believe that the power gained is worth the risk. Some choose otherwise, and that's okay. There's also one dude cursed by Hircine in, I think, Falkreath. He randomly changes into a wolf, and can't control it, resulting in the murder of a young girl. He's not a normal werewolf though, he's cursed by a Daedric prince, and he tries his hardest to fix himself. As for vampires, their hunted throughout Tamriel, so they understandably are mostly bad guys. The same goes for necromancers, and even a lot of conjurers. This isn't because their vampirism warps their brain, I believe it's because their constantly being hunted. Non-hostile vampires, such as Babette, are shown to be in complete control. She hasn't fed on anyone in the Dark Brotherhood, and neither did Vicente Valtieri in Oblivion (not without consent, at least). In one quest, I had to assassinate a vampire who lived peacefully in a town with his partner, another vampire. They had succesfully passed as human for years, which indicates a reasonable degree of control.
Sorry about the overload of text. I get really passionate about Elder Scrolls, haha.