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Furry fans may engage in ] fantasies on MUCKs, ]es, MUDs and other online role play environments. Such environments frequently have age-restricted this kind of activity, though some MUD-style furry games are restricted in their entirety to "adults only", such as ]{{fact}}. Furry fans may engage in ] fantasies on MUCKs, ]es, MUDs and other online role play environments. Such environments frequently have age-restricted this kind of activity, though some MUD-style furry games are restricted in their entirety to "adults only", such as ]{{fact}}.

Furries are also said to have sex orgies at Furry Conventions, though it is hard (and disgusting) to get photographical proof of that.


The term '''Furvert''' (a ] of "furry" and "pervert") specifically refers to the subgroup of the fandom that sexualizes anthropomorphic animal <ref>http://www.deviantdesires.com/map/furverts.html</ref> The term may be used pejoratively, as a joke, or merely as a descriptor. The term '''Furvert''' (a ] of "furry" and "pervert") specifically refers to the subgroup of the fandom that sexualizes anthropomorphic animal <ref>http://www.deviantdesires.com/map/furverts.html</ref> The term may be used pejoratively, as a joke, or merely as a descriptor.

Revision as of 03:52, 14 July 2006

File:Shanda12.JPG
Shanda the Panda #12, an example of a furry comic

Furry fandom is an artistic and literary genre that celebrates the humanization of animals, specifically in cartoons and comics.

The furry genre is a metagenre based on the idea of fantasy animal characters, rather than any one type of fiction. Any title in any type of media can be considered a part of the furry genre simply by having a fantasy animal character in it, though such characters are most often seen in cartoons, comics, science fiction, allegorical novels, commercials and video games.

Members of the furry fandom, known as furry fans, furries, or furs, particularly enjoy media that includes fictional anthropomorphic animal characters with human personalities and characteristics. Some examples of anthropomorphic attributes are: exhibiting human intelligence and facial expressions, the ability to speak, walking on two legs, and wearing clothing.

Since the mid-1980s, furry fans have referred to any anthropomorphic animal character as a furry. Other terms for these types of characters are funny animal and talking animal, or kemono in Japan.

The furry community has grown rapidly with the advent of the Internet. Content created by furry fans on the World Wide Web covers a wide range of interests, including fantasy, philosophy, sex, politics, religion and lifestyle. Some fans consider coverage of their activities by the mass media and entertainment industry to be sensational, as it tends to focus on fetishistic aspects of the fandom.

History and Inspiration

File:Uybook11.jpg
Cover for Usagi Yojimbo, book 11

The term "furry" is said to have come into existence at a science fiction convention in the late 1970s. At that time the term was used to describe one specific genre of fantasy art. The fandom for furry characters traces its organization back to a science fiction convention in 1980, when a drawing of a character from Steve Gallacci’s Albedo started a discussion of anthropomorphic characters in science fiction novels, spawning a discussion group that met at various science fiction and comics conventions.

Over the next several years, a gradually increasing number of “furry fans” developed fanzines and eventually began to have gatherings at house parties. By 1987 enough interest had been generated for the first furry convention.

As the internet became more accessible, it became the most popular means for furry fans to keep in touch and share their artistic efforts. This gained the fandom higher visibility and it began to grow rapidly.

Virtual environments, such as MUCKs, soon became the most popular places on the net for furry fans to meet and communicate. One of the oldest and largest MUCKs in existence is FurryMUCK. One of the newest virtual environments to attract furry fans is Second Life.

Examples of the types of animal characters that typically inspire furry fans are represented by the titles below.

From cartoons
Roger Rabbit, The Angry Beavers, Rocko's Modern Life, Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse, Wile E. Coyote
From animated feature films
Disney's Robin Hood, My Neighbor Totoro, The Secret of NIMH, Bagi, Madagascar
From TV
Father of the Pride, Kimba the White Lion, Disney's Rescue Rangers, SWAT Kats
From comics
Usagi Yojimbo, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Omaha the Cat Dancer, Shanda The Panda, Albedo Anthropomorphics, Maus
From novels
Richard Adams' Watership Down, George Orwell's Animal Farm, Andre Norton's Breed to Come, Brian Jacques' Redwall series, Steven Boyett's The Architect of Sleep, S. Andrew Swann's Moreau series
From games
RuneQuest, EverQuest, the Star Fox series, Sonic the Hedgehog series, Jazz Jackrabbit series, Conker's Bad Fur Day
From webcomics
Newshounds, Boomer Express, The Suburban Jungle, Kevin and Kell, Faux Pas, Namir Deiter, Sabrina Online, Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures

Many members of the fandom have also cited as inspiration the historical usage of anthropomorphic animals in world mythology, including but not limited to Greek, Egyptian, Japanese and Native American. Aesop's Fables is also cited on many lists of furry resources.

The most common term used by cartoonists to describe anthropomorphic animals is "funny animals," a term that goes back to the early 20th century and seems to have been inspired by the use of animal characters in The Funnies, rather than as a reference to animal comedians. Additionally, in Japan there is a genre called kemono, a tangentially related but independent genre with different cultural associations.

There are dozens of webcomics based on animal characters. Many are created by furry fans and, as such, may be referred to as "furry comics." Titles such as Kevin and Kell are created by cartoonists outside of the fandom, and thus may be referred to as traditional funny animal comics. Some consider there to be little, if any, actual difference between a furry comic and a traditional funny animal comic.

Fan creations

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Furry fans are eager for more material than is available from mainstream publishers. The demand is filled by fellow fans—amateur to professional artists, writers, and publishers who produce drawings, paintings, stories, independent comic books, fanzines, websitemasquerades, dances, or fund-raising charity events (as entertainers). While many fursuits look like sports mascots, some fursuits go beyond that and include moving jaw mechanisms, animatronics, prosthetic makeup, or other frills.

Art and writing

Many furry fans participate in the arts, becoming amateur—and sometimes professional—illustrators, comic strip authors, painters, sculptors, writers, musicians, and craft artists. Primarily, the fandom produces hand- or computer-drawn artwork, although there are many pieces, stories, filk music pieces, and even photographs.

While the bulk of these fan-created pieces of art are distributed through nonprofessional media such as personal web sites and via email, some publish their works in press association|Amateur Press Associations, or APAzines. A few have mainstream, professional credits to their names.

Role playing characters ("Fursonas")

Some furry fans create anthropomorphic animal characters in order to engage in role-playing sessions on the Internet; these characters may be used in MUDs,more popular than FurryMUCK. There are also several furry-themed areas and communities in the Massively Multiplayer Online Role-Playing Game Second Life.

Conventions

Group of fursuiters posing with an admirer during WorldCon 2002.

Sufficient membership and interest has allowed for the creation of many annual furry conventions in North America and Europe, the largest being Anthr in Pittsburgh in July In 2005, 18 such conventions took place around the world. The first known furry convention, ConFurence, is no longer held. (Califur has replaced it, since both conventions were/are based in southern California.)

Many conventions feature an auction or for various charitable beneficiaries over its seven-year history, and Anthrocon has donated more than $66,000 to animal-related charities since 1997.

Furry lifestylers

The phrase furry lifestyler is used to describe an individual with beliefs similar to those of animal related religions and philosophies, such as the reincarnation of an animal spirit

Some lifestylers may also adopt physical attributes of an animal, such as animal-related hair styles, tattoos, and articles of clothing or jewelry. Cases of people undergoing extensive body modifications are documented, as shown on the Discovery Channel program Humanimals: Wil, but are extremely rare.

The phrases "furry lifestyle" and "furry lifestyler" first appeared in July 1996 on the newsgroup alt.fan.furry during an ongoing dispute within that community. One element within furry fandom believed thcreation "furry lifestylers." The fandom and the lifestyle have been considered separate concepts since that time.

Some other communities, such as the "were" or "therian" communities, share similar beliefs with furry lifestylers but wish to from the term “furry,” as they are not necessarily interested in furry fandom or do not wish to have their beliefs trivialized by association with a "cartoon" fandom.

Sex and furry fandom

A number of furry fans create erotic works. works.

Furry fans may engage in cybersex fantasies on MUCKs, MUSHes, MUDs and other online role play environments. Such environments frequently have age-restricted this kind of activity, though some MUD-style furry games are restricted in their entirety to "adults only", such as Tapestries MUCK.


The term Furvert (a portmanteau of "furry" and "pervert") specifically refers to the subgroup of the fandom that sexualizes anthropomorphic animal The term may be used pejoratively, as a joke, or merely as a descriptor.

Media coverage

Portrayal of the furry fandom in the mainstream media is rare but several shows and magazines have featured furries in some way. Some members of the furry community feel these focus too much on the sexual aspect of the furry subculture. Examples include articles and columns in Vanity Fair and Loaded magazines, the syndicated sex column Savage Love, and dramatized fiction or documentaries portrayed o />, The Drew Carey Show , and MTV's Sex2K. More recent news stories have noted that "despite their wild image from Vanity Fair, MTV and CSI, furry conventions aren't about kinky sex between weirdos gussied up in foxy costumes,", but instead about "people talking and drawing animals and comic-book characters in sketchbooks."

Although various articles have linked the furry fandom to sexual fetishes, such as bestiality and plushophilia, some furry interest in a certain genre of art. They do not think of furry fandom as being any different from other fandoms, such as anime, which also have erotic sub-genres and sexually oriented role play, but are not judged as a whole because of them.

Though the sexual controversy tends to capture the greatest amount of attention, furry entertainment of a non-sexual nature that is suitable for all audiences continues to be produced in great abundance by the fandom.

Due to the notoriety the furry fandom has gotten for the erotic content produced by a number of artists, some furries have asked that sexual content be limited, or created to spotlight art of a less controversial nature. Furry conventions also have established guidelines of conduct that restrict sexually explicit material and behavior to appropriate areas and situations.

Criticisms

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The anti furry movement is made up of hateful persecution of an oppressed minority group, thus it has picked up the terms "fursecution".

Members of the anti-furry movement may come from outside the fandom or they may be disenchanted former members. Some may belong to similar fandoms, such as anime, and may pick on furries knowing that furry fans occasionally respond in a heated manner. Others may honestly hate the fandom for one reason or another.

Some anti-furries may go behave . Some make negative comments about furry fans on sites or forums. Websites like Something Awful or Portal of Evil often poke fun at the furry community. Ridiculing also exists on blogs like the Live Journal community Fursecution.

Furries who are dissatisfied with certain community up to ridicule. They may even join anti-furries in their condemnation of certain aspects of the fandom and with them at things they also find funny.

See also

References

  1. Kurutz, Daveen Rae (June 17, 2006). "It's a furry weekend". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. Retrieved 2006-06-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. Definition of metagenre
  3. Staeger, Rob (July 26, 2001). "Invasion of the Furries". The Wayne Suburban. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. "'Furries' Descend On Golden Triangle". WTAE-TV. June 16, 2006. Retrieved 2006-06-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ Belser, Ann (June 18, 2006). "All about 'furry fandom' at confab". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 2006-06-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ "Pleasures of the fur". Vanity Fair.
  7. Video of CSI episode and video of furry scenes from ER's furry episode
  8. Yarf Chronology Of Furry Fandom
  9. "dmuth" (January 15, 2006). "Furries! Introduction to the Furry Fandom". Claws-and-Paws.com. Retrieved 2006-06-30. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. "Golden Age Funnies". Retrieved 2006-06-30.
  11. Cooksey, David (June 16, 2006). "Furries Descend On Pittsburgh". KDKA-TV. Retrieved 2006-06-30. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  12. http://www.arclight.net/yarf/YARF_Chronology.html
  13. http://www.anthroarts.org/activities.html
  14. http://www.anthrocon.org/charity
  15. http://orion.animaltrackscode.
  16. http://www.deviantdesires.com/map/furverts.html
  17. The Drew Carey Show - Furry Episode, article on Wikifur
  18. MTV's Sex2K Fursuit Video
  19. The Works", Pittsburgh City Paper, 2/2/2006
  20. "Animal Passions: The furries come to town — and our correspondent tails along", Pittsburgh City Paper, 6/29/2006

Further reading

  • Craig Hilton: Furry— An Insider's View from the Outside, parts 1 & 2, South Fur Lands #2 & #3, 1995, 1996

External links

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Information

Art

  • Yerf — A furry art archive with restrictions on quality and mature subject matter
  • VCL — A mostly-unrestricted archive of furry art and fiction
  • Transfur — A filterable transformation artwork site including furry themes
  • deviantART Traditional Media Drawings (Anthros) — An anthropomorphic art subsection of the enormous deviantART repository; also see the corresponding section in Digital Art
  • Fur Affinity — A deviantART style website for anthromorphic art, music, and literature
  • Rabbit Valley — A furry comics and art website

Other

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