Yes, you definitely need to simplify, you've got way too much going on. Vanguard and Fidelity are pretty similar, so pick one or the other and consolidate as best you can.
Next, you need a strategy. Figure out what you are holding and why. I keep seeing the words " emerging markets." That's not bad, but there is a reason why the markets are "emerging." And the reason is that the markets historically haven't worked well. Keep that in mind. Don't rule it out, but keep it in mind. IMO emerging markets should be a small-ish fraction of your portfolio.
Next, all your bond funds could be one or two bond funds. The purpose of a fund is diversification. So if you are going to have more than one or two, you need a solid reason why the different funds are necessary. The reason to hold bonds is low volatility and safety, right? So ditch the emerging markets bonds and hold the safe stuff, in whatever percentage your strategy dictates. 80/20 or 60/40 or whatever it is. If things go south, they will go south in the emerging markets first, so that's not where you want to go for safety.
Next, for stocks you want to hold the broader market, which it looks like you are doing, but you can do it more simply. Fidelity and Vanguard both offer total stock market index funds. So do that, and ditch the small cap and mid-cap funds separately. Unless your strategy says to overweight in those areas (it probably shouldn't) Ditch the dividend fund, most large caps pay dividends anyway, so you are likely just doubling up on stuff you already own.
REITs are fine. Hold in whatever percentage your strategy dictates. But REITs work best inside an IRA or 401(k).