Fan Identities in the Furry Fandom

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(2 reviews)

"Although definition can vary, to be a Furry, a person identifies with an animal as part of their personality; this can be on a mystical/religious level or a psychological level. In modern Western society having a spirit animal or animal identity can sometimes be framed as social deviance rather than religious or totemic diversity. Jessica Ruth Austin investigates how Furries use the online space to create a 'Furry identity'. She argues that for highly identified Furries, posthumanism is an appropriate framework to use. For less identified Furries, who are more akin to fans, fan studies literature is used to conceptualise their identity construction. This book argues that the Furries are not a homogenous group and with varying levels of identification within the fandom, so shows that negative media representations of the Furry Fandom have wrongly pathologized the Furries as deviants as opposed to fans."--

1 edition

A good read for those wanting a balance of critique and new avenues for research within furry

I can't speak for everything in the book, not being a sociology/philosophy major (Foucault... I hate you so much...) but a majority of Jessica's work just confirms what I've always thought about the fandom being in it - it is just like any other fandom and has characteristics of all fandoms, with a little querks here in there from being based mostly online.

The book goes through a clear overview of research on the fandom so far, the responses of furs to less than stellar reception and critiques existing research so far (especially FurScience, which always stood out to me as a bit biased and methodologically flawed). It then gives its own hypothesis (lifestylers vs. casual fans) as well as avenues for further research, including BIPOC which I appreciated.

Overall, worth a read for a balanced outsider's perspective on the fandom and comparisons with other subcultures.

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Subjects

  • Zoology
  • Furry fandom (Subculture)
  • Fans (Persons)
  • Psychology
  • Identity (Psychology)
  • Anthropomorphism
  • Media studies