TES Literature

Hi, did anyone else go autism on the various texts found in the Elder Scrolls mythos? Here are some of my impressions. I'd say the best and most entertaining works are the treacherous histories, personal journals, certain fables, and the gothic/horror pieces. Histories specific to the main plot of a franchise entry seem incomplete, and require ocmpletion of the game, or spoilering appendings from the wiki to be complete. The geographical notes are unfortunately subsumed by the wiki, but can be read for flavor sometimes. Overall, 100-200 pages worth of typical sized paperbacks would be representative of TES's library.

If anyone could explain to me the significance of the Vivec sermons, I'd be grateful.

Lusty Argonian Maid

U

S

T

Y

A

R

G

O

N

I

A

N

M

A

I

D

You'd probably be better off posting this in /v/

Something I considered. I feel more at home here, and I'm pretty sure /v/ has a higher noise to signal ratio.

You'd have a better time having a conversation with yourself than the /v/ rabble.

They really suck, man

The 36 Lessons are good. The while Morrowind episode was well written. I wish C0da is completed as a graphic novel someday.

>>>but rly the books in morrowind were comfy as fuck, I spent so much time looking for nice books to add to my collection. Kirkbride's pseudo-religious texts were wank but very nice for worldbuilding, the mythic texts on the dunmer were the most entertaining

Everything in Vivec's lessons is literally true, literally false, symbolically true, and a meaningless ruse all at the same time.

sounds like derrida

Basically, but with more reality-rewriting magical nonsense. And belly-magic.

Well it's the exact same kind of pap except there's no meat to them, actual or prospective. Aside from the constrained gameplay entries and unlike most other ingame texts the 36 lessons are entertaining to read - but you can safely dismiss anyone who uses the term "metaphysics" in relation to them as an ignorant and self-important fool.

The metaphysics of the Elder Scrolls universe are fascinating, though, and it's a legitimate use of the term given that the metaphysics of a fictional reality need not have anything to do with ours. Most of it is clearly drawn straight from Hindu metaphysics, but the synthesis of that foundation with foreign and original elements is worthy of attention.

>Well it's the exact same kind of pap except there's no meat to them, actual or prospective

literally derrida

Which are the nost important/interesting lessons?

I liked the Skyrim text by that winterhold scholar madman living in an iceberg and fucking around with the god of reason.
The main problem with vidya with books, it's that I go full Veeky Forums autism collecting and reading every book

this one? I like it

Rumination on the Elder Scrolls - by Septimus Signus, College of Winterhold
Imagine living beneath the waves with a strong-sighted blessing of most excellent fabric. Holding the fabric over your gills, you would begin to breathe-drink its warp and weft. Though the plantmatter fibers imbue your soul, the wretched plankton would pollute the cloth until it stank to heavens of prophecy. This is one manner in which the Scrolls first came to pass, but are we the sea, or the breather, or the fabric? Or are we the breath itself?

Can we flow through the Scrolls as knowledge flow through, being the water, or are we the stuck morass of sea-filth that gathers on the edge?

Imagine, again this time but different. A bird cresting the wind is lifted by a gust and downed by a stone. But the stone can come from above, if the bird is upside down.

Where, then, did the gust come from? And which direction? Did the gods send either, or has the bird decreed their presence by her own mindmaking?

The all-sight of the Scrolls makes a turning of the mind such that relative positions are absolute in their primacy.

I ask you again to imagine for me. This time you are beneath the ground, a tiny acorn planted by some well-meaning elf-maiden of the woodlands for her pleasure. You wish to grow but fear what you may become, so you push off the water, the dirt, the sun, to stay in your hole. But it is in the very pushing that you become a tree, in spite of yourself. How did that happen?

The acorn is a kind of tree-egg in this instance, and the knowledge is water and sun. We are the chicken inside the egg, but also the dirt. The knowledge from the Scrolls is what we push against to become full-sighted ourselves.

One final imagining before your mind closes from the shock of ever-knowing. You are now a flame burning bright blue within a vast emptiness. In time you see your brothers and sisters, burning of their own in the distance and along your side.

A sea of pinpoints, a constellation of memories. Each burns bright, then flickers. Then two more take its place but not forever lest the void fills with rancid light that sucks the thought.

Each of our minds is actually the emptiness, and the learnings of the Scrolls are the pinpoints. Without their stabbing light, my consciousness would be as a vast nothingness, unknowing its emptiness as a void is unknowing of itself. But the burnings are dangerous, and must be carefully tended and minded and brought to themselves and spread to their siblings.

what did he mean by this?

Skooma good, not doing Skooma bad.

Also, anyone know which of Vivec's lessons are considered representative?

it's obviously trying to ape the sound of the Bible, but with more lol-so-random mythology mixed into it and random bits of mumbo jumbo.

>it's obviously trying to ape the sound of the Bible

Nope

You're obviously trying to ape the sound of being smart.

Jackass.

36 lessons of vivec is literature-tier