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Psychologists study furry dysfunction
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The New Meat
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Posted: 9/18/2004 9:53:48 AM     Post subject: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  

Just today I've learned that there's going to be an interesting psychologists' conference in neighboring (for me, at least) San Francisco this coming May.

It's called "Unstudied & Understudied Sexual Communities: New Areas for Research, Education, and Therapy," and, according to their promotional literature, this conference "will explore erotic interests such as electrical stimulation, furry sex, plushy sex, atypical gender expression, sex worker patialism, barebacking, pony play, urophilia, urethral stimulation, infantilism, pantyhose fetish... and we are not even listing the REALLY unusual."

Apparently - according to some friends in the field - the psychology community has been really enamored with slash as of late, but now they're branching out. Since there hasn't been much written on furry and these other prurient interests, the conference is actively looking for student and amateur articles to publish. Quick, people! We've got the interweb's largest community of furry experts RIGHT HERE. YES YES Let's show these pompous ivy-league-ivory tower academic commie bastards how we write pop-pychobabble furry articles in this town and-

Oh, wait, deadline was Oct. 15. Never mind.

Anyway, I expect a couple psych grad students I know will be attending. Should be interesting to hear what they learn.



Also: Conference includes an "erotic photography exhibit," a "fetish Fashion show," and "opportunities to visit local community sexual venues."


Thought you guys might like to know.
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Computolio
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Posted: 9/18/2004 6:31:13 PM     Post subject:  

FUCKING FINALLY
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Rankin
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Posted: 9/18/2004 7:29:04 PM     Post subject: Re: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  

Just today I've learned that there's going to be an interesting psychologists' conference in neighboring (for me, at least) San Francisco this coming May.


Having a psychology conference in San Francisco is akin to strapping yourself in bloody slabs of meat and going swimming in shark-infested waters. Sure, there's the thrill, I guess, but you're going to come out missing, in the very least, a few digits. :wink:
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mouse
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Posted: 9/18/2004 9:17:51 PM     Post subject: Re: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  

Just today I've learned that there's going to be an interesting psychologists' conference in neighboring (for me, at least) San Francisco this coming May.
Quick, people! We've got the interweb's largest community of furry experts RIGHT HERE. YES YES Let's show these pompous ivy-league-ivory tower academic commie bastards how we write pop-pychobabble furry articles in this town and-

Oh, wait, deadline was Oct. 15. Never mind.


Like just shy of a year ago ? or next month?

Im with Wayd on the fact that "furry sex" is almost an oxymoron. Other than when it combines desperation, sadness, and convention hotel rooms. Im not sure exactly what they are going to write about.

Anyway, I expect a couple psych grad students I know will be attending. Should be interesting to hear what they learn.

Also: Conference includes an "erotic photography exhibit," a "fetish Fashion show," and "opportunities to visit local community sexual venues."

Thought you guys might like to know.


Im interested in hearing what comes of this. Id like to hear an actually scientific/sociological report based on actual field research rather than you usually see, which about equals a google search .. or less than that.

also, "opportunities to visit local community sexual venues." whats this ? the local titty bar? I gotta get in some classes that have field trips like that ... I must be in the wrong field or something
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The New Meat
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Posted: 9/18/2004 11:19:56 PM     Post subject: Re: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  


Oh, wait, deadline was Oct. 15. Never mind.


Like just shy of a year ago ? or next month?


Next month, sorry. I forgot that we were still in September.


Im with Wayd on the fact that "furry sex" is almost an oxymoron. Other than when it combines desperation, sadness, and convention hotel rooms. Im not sure exactly what they are going to write about.


I'm sure most articles will probably be look at furry sex in the abstract (trying to discern where the urges originally come from, early childhood influence of cartoons, blah blah blah) rather than furry sex in reality (The whole nerd-gay angle).

Because nerd-gay, although fairly ubiquitous in furry, isn't really unique to furry. Psychologists studying sex already have about a bazillion theories about the interplay between weird sexual behaviors and pathetic desperation. No new ground to cover there.


Im interested in hearing what comes of this. Id like to hear an actually scientific/sociological report based on actual field research rather than you usually see, which about equals a google search .. or less than that.

also, "opportunities to visit local community sexual venues." whats this ? the local titty bar? I gotta get in some classes that have field trips like that ... I must be in the wrong field or something


If I hear of any worthwhile studies coming out of this, I'll post about them here. But that's all a long ways in the future.

As for where they'll visit... Well, it's San Francisco, so I'm assuming they'll probably go down to the Castro and look at some leather shops and gay bars. Probably visit with some of the local stripper/prositute rights groups. They might head over to Berkeley to see our womyn's power sex shop "Good Vibrations." And certainly they'll visit http://www.powerexchange.com/frame.html
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Wayd Wolf
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Posted: 9/19/2004 1:05:49 AM     Post subject: Re: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  

Im with Wayd on the fact that "furry sex" is almost an oxymoron. Other than when it combines desperation, sadness, and convention hotel rooms. Im not sure exactly what they are going to write about.


THANK YOU MOUSE! I freaking brainfarted and couldn't remember that word. Oxymoron is it exactly.

What IS to study anyhow? Furries "pawing off" each other because they can barely manage that without screwing it up? The interaction of people who can't even manage to fulfill the strongest drive in their bodies?

This smells like a goldmine of doubletalk newspeak gibbering. Recontextualizing Synergistic Systems of Post-Modernist Reactions to Middle American Introvert Perversions from a Radical Feminist Perspective in Deconstructionist Terms?

Crap. I think I just came up with a title of something on next year's Philosophy courses' required text list. Somebody should pay me.
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comicartist42
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Posted: 9/19/2004 9:32:17 AM     Post subject:  

Um... Oxymoron is a phrase that contains two OPPOSITES.

So.. are you saying that "furry" and "sex" are opposites?

Because that sounds a little contrary to the general party line here... >_>
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The New Meat
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Posted: 9/19/2004 10:03:04 AM     Post subject: Re: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  


What IS to study anyhow?


>I'm sure most articles will probably be look at furry sex in the abstract (trying to discern where the urges originally come from, early childhood influence of cartoons, blah blah blah) rather than furry sex in reality (The whole nerd-gay angle).

Because nerd-gay, although fairly ubiquitous in furry, isn't really unique to furry. Psychologists studying sex already have about a bazillion theories about the interplay between weird sexual behaviors and pathetic desperation. No new ground to cover there.
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ZenZhu
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Posted: 9/20/2004 3:01:41 PM     Post subject:  

While "furry sex" may be an oxymoron in practical application, I'm sure what they'll be looking at is more "furry sexuality." After all, many sexual behaviors actually preclude sexual contact with other people. I'd assume the focus is not the actual sexual interaction of furries, since they'd have to wait until a blue moon for that. I'd guess much of it will be exploring why someone sexually fixates on Fifi le Fume and Babs Bunny rather than humans, what point in one's psychosexual development this tends to occur, and what factors contribute to it.

I wouldn't be surprised to hear they find some kind of relation between sexualizing Sally Acorn and going prison gay. Maybe real girls are just too scary to them, so they focus on cartoon girls and go t3h gh3y to get a little gratificaiton without having to deal with those soft, bumpy, scary things. Where the leap from fantasizing about Princess from G-Force to wanking to pictures of Jenna from Balto occurs, though... who knows.
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m_estrugo
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Posted: 9/20/2004 3:11:24 PM     Post subject:  

I found the call for papers on this URL:
http://www.sexscience.org/uploads/media/05_call_for_papers.pdf
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mouse
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Posted: 9/20/2004 7:04:08 PM     Post subject: Re: Psychologists study furry dysfunction  

I'm sure most articles will probably be look at furry sex in the abstract (trying to discern where the urges originally come from, early childhood influence of cartoons, blah blah blah) rather than furry sex in reality (The whole nerd-gay angle).


Yeah, I was only contesting thier term "furry sex". Because looking at pornography and type-fuicking, isnt really sex. Thats all I was saying. That and while there are people who get off on fursuits - I think it actualy is a very small subset of people. Outside of jokes or tabloid style articles - it doesnt really reflect the reality of furry fandom. Like there is lots of other fucked up stuff going on that merits more attention.

As far as the childhood influence of cartoons - I think what you are seeing in the people who do mostly slash-art. The rest of it is more a type of xenophilia if anything - thats something I see rarely mentioned (I could be wrong on this) by all these sex-psychologists - especially when discussing furry fandom.
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The New Meat
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Posted: 9/20/2004 11:00:06 PM     Post subject:  

Xenophilia? Would that be a love of the strange and exotic?
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mouse
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Posted: 9/21/2004 4:05:46 AM     Post subject:  

Xenophilia? Would that be a love of the strange and exotic?


Yeah basically. I think literally the xeno prefix means 'alien' ...not just alien as in like ET or aliens vs predator... but more like the flat, literal definition of 'alien'. Including what could be just considered strange and or exotic.

Stretching the definition to its more plain levels it could probably include people who have 'jungle fever' so to speak. People into different races other than thier own. (Im going back the other way from what 'xenophobic' means here)

I didn't really look any of this up per se - just off the top of my head. I think morphed animal characters stand out on thier own because they combine something different - 'an alien' or a human-like sentient lifeforms combined with something familiar - terrestrial animals found on earth. ..or however you want to look at it.

This kind of ties into a larger idea I have of the whole thing but Im not gonna go into that here and now.
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ZenZhu
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Posted: 9/21/2004 3:26:13 PM     Post subject:  

Of course, the whole xeno thing as applied to morphs still has some consistencies with regular human porn. If you put aside the small section of furries that produce zoo works like dolphins with thier prehensile winkies and such, there are basically one of two sets of things present in furry porn.... either A) tits and ass, or B) cock and balls.

While the general reaction of your average schmoe to seeing DD boobs and a near-clinical diagram of a vagina on a blue skunk girl is going to be initial shock and aversion, followed by at least a passing glance at the humanoid nudity, then passing it off as either novel, silly, or repugnant.... the furry allure is really just a novelty that repackages the focus of the image.... tits and ass.

Seeing cartoon animals exude a sense of sexuality isn't new. The female felines in Tom and Jerry were typically curvaceous. Fifi le Fume was the female counterpart of Pepe le Pew, who embodied the thrill of pursuing amorous encounters. Kath Soucie's ability to rather huskily drip sexuality from her voice didn't hurt, either. Minerva Mink was your cartoon animal equivalent of a blonde bombshell, and Lola Bunny... what little of Space Jam I saw, had your girl-next-door/tomboy element with the underlying tones of someone who could go from 0 to slut in 6.8 seconds under the right circumstances (or with enough Jack Daniels). As we've seen with Huslter Canada's mascot, cartoon animal mascots with a healthy dose of anthropomorphised human sexuality is hardly anything new. Hell, I've even seen a line of sugar-free ice cream products that uses a skinny cow with a modest bustline. Combining animal characters with elements of human sex appeal is hardly new or shocking. But, they're not meant to be serious wanking material.

I think what the furries miss, though, is that all of this is merely human sexuality dressed up differently. While furry porn has a xenophilic element, it's focus is still human sexuality. I'd dare say what often causes the aversion to a lot of furry porn is either the extreme exaggeration of genitalia (it seems rather evident when it's serious and when it's done in comedy), or the kinds of fetishes displayed in the images. I personally don't mind the more tasteful or Playboy-esque furry nudes. While I may not find them arousing, I at least appreciate the aesthetics of the pose, the colors used, etc.

When you start uploading cub art, tentacle rape, or stuff with furries peeing their pants as a sexual thing........ well...... I'll respect your freedom to upload such things.... but I may also exercise my freedom to mock it.

There's a few things that, in their own right, make the draw of furry porn to some people unsurprising (mind you, this is all just theorizing):

*It's easily accessable. With the large influx of teens to furry circles in the past few years, you're getting a lot of new furry fans that, at present, cannot legally acquire pornography. Of course, they may not be competent enough with web searches... or covering their tracks if they share a computer with their parents... to make Google's image search their first line of attack for acquiring porn. Furry porn isn't regulated on sites like Furnation (depending on the individual's page) and VCL. As such, if you're a lusty teen wanting to see some boobs... you may not care if it's on a pop idol or a humanoid skunk. VCL is easy to get to, so, there's your porn fix.

I remember in my teen years, before I could legally buy Playboy, and back in the BBS days, I could still buy artistic reference books and books on glamour photography. I'm not sure what logic dictated that I couldn't buy the pictures of naked women behind the counter... but I could buy pictures of equally naked women from the section labeled Art & Photography at the bookstore. As such, my T&A fix came largely from glamor photography books, artists' model photo-reference books, and racier publications from artists like Boris Vallejo and Frank Frazetta. Of course, I also legitimately used these books for honing my own artistic abilities... but it was also used for more clandestine purposes. These days, furry porn, for some of those that come across it, is just easy access to unregulated porn.

*Some of our first exposure to sexuality is through cartoon characters. Many of the WB cartoons, most notably, have a healthy dose of humor that is aimed at adults. Not to say it is "adult humor," but it is jokes and themes adults may appreciate, and kids may just find silly because they don't completely understand it. As such, we get to see Fifi, Lola, or Minerva vamping it up at an early age. I wouldn't be surprised if this somehow registers with the developing sexuality of the young viewers. Minerva using her feminine wiles to con her way out of winding up at the taxidermist (I hesitated to say "stuffed and mounted"... wait.... DUOH) is a display of human sexual behavior and, while younger viewers may not be able to fully understand what they're seeing, something somewhere in them tells them it's a good thing. In the cases of the extreme, furries, however, perhaps they wind up fixating on the animal cartoon, rather than the behavior portrayed. They confuse finding the behavior sexy with finding the animal sexy.

I can't speak for anyone else's experiences, but I can't say I ever really found myself experiencing "strange new feelings" as a kid over Fifi le Fume or the cat women in Tom & Jerry. I will say, however, that my first "furry crush" was Cheetara from Thundercats. Of course, she looked like little more than a human with 80's style feline makeup. To a young kid, those thunder thighs crammed into a spandex outfit was a first glimpse how pleasant the human body could be. And, ogling a cartoon character got you in a lot less trouble than staring at some bikini-clad girl on the beach... since, doing one was obvious to your parents... doing the other just looked like you were a breakfast cereal zombie on Saturday mornings.

*Being part of our baser instincts, sex does have its animal-like qualities. Not to suggest bending your wife over the coffee table is the same as seeing bears humping on Animal Planet, but, sex is simultaneously part of our higher functions (in that we are cognizant of it and can enjoy it on levels animals can't) and part of our basic drives (the insticnt to perpetuate the species (often to excess in the poorer, more Bible-thumping portions of the population :D)). Much of our sexual terminology has ties to its more animalistic side. "Macho," if I remember correctly, actually refers to bulls in Spanish or Portugese or something. (I remember someone mentioning "macho bull" is a redundant term). We have the term "animal magnetism." We sometimes have sex "doggie style" (the derivation of that term being a bit more of a visual description than a term for something less tangible). We use colognes and perfumes to appeal to senses in the ways animals might use pheremones. Our clubbing outfits could be seen as basically an artificial form of mating plumage. We "show our moves" on the dance floor in a fashion similar to animals doing mating displays (usually looking about as silly as some animals in the process).

As such, sex itself has many animal-like connotations. Many peole find women dressed in fur coats, or on fur rugs alluring. This is unsurprising, as fur has a textural, sensual quality. We have Playboy "bunnies" in little cotton tails and ears. Looking at the Halloween stores that are now opening, cat and mouse costumes for women are well-stocked. In a way, this might all be considered an expression of the animal side of sex, and also a bit of a xenophilic titilation. It's alluring in its novelty. In light of these notions, really, a purple-furred skunk femme is not too far removed from a sexy woman dressed in a bikini and wearing a pair of fake cat ears. Of course, most of us would prefer to lust after the real woman than the imaginary cartoon one. Which brings me to my next theory...

*Nekkid cartoon critters are "safe." Since a lot of furries these days are teens and young adults.... or adults that never really matured during those socially formative years.... they're at a point in their lives where they are discovering and exploring their human sexuality. Cartoon animal characters have been used to "soften the blow" for many gritty realities. McGruff and.. uh... whoever the McGruff puppy kid is.... is used to help approach children with topics related to crime, kidnapping, child molestation, etc. Many fire departments use a cartoon dalmation mascot on brochures and other materials for children helping them learn about fire safety. Animal characters are used to take the edge off of many topics that are often considered a bit too much of a dose of harsh reality for kids. As such, I can kind of see where cute cartoon critters with boobs might not be quite as intimidating to youths who are exploring their sexuality as photographs of real people.

Additionally, much of our society teaches us that nude photography... or almost any depiction of the nude form created after the Renaissance is "wrong" and "pornographic." With the abundancy of porn and adult magazines, much of American society basically lumps any photographic image of a nude human into the category of "pornographic." There seems to be this paradox where, if it's photographed, it's porn.. and if it's drawn, it's "art." How many times have we seen a furry image that has absolutely no artistic merit or sense of aesthetics, but yet the furries quickly defend it as art?

Kids often discover masturbation before they even know there's a word for it. Naturally, youths and young adults (depending on when you start indulging your developing sexuality) will seek out sexually arousing stimuli (males moreso visually than females, so they say). If they swipe their father's Playboys, or Victoria's Secret catalogs... or open up to the bra secion of the Sears cataloge... or squirrel away a copy of National Geographic (don't get many tribal boobies in there anymore).... there may be associated feelings of guilt. They think they are doing something "bad" by looking at photographs of nude women (or men). If it's drawn, on the other hand.. like furry images.. then it's "art." Maybe it doesn't seem as bad. I don't know. But maybe the fluffy cartoon animals sporting big boobs and dripping phalluses is considered "less bad" by many of them. Who knows.

I think furry porn is often a case of bait-and-switch. It seems like the furries fixate on the animal characters. And many of the furries themselves may feel the allure is particularly the animal characters. But, really, I think it's the expression of human sexuality that gives it allure. Even for someone as anti-human as EbonLupus, the depiction of a sexual act between two animals is really registering on a level of human sexuality. Even buying into the arguement of recreational sex occuring in the animal kingdom, humans are cognizant of the sex act on many more levels than animals. As such, I'd dare say it is impossible to for humans to totally detach themselves from human sexuality and think of it in the same terms that animals do. So, furry porn, ranging from the simple nudes to the extreme zoo fetish stuff is really little more than something that appeals on some level to our human sexuality.

When it's all said and done, it's still basically human tits, ass, pussy, cocks and balls. The anthro animals are basically just a fuzzy gift wrap on human sexuality that is maybe a bit of novelty for some, and confusion for others.

Or I'm just totally full of crap.
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The New Meat
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Posted: 9/21/2004 6:51:28 PM     Post subject:  

Of course, the whole xeno thing as applied to morphs still has some consistencies with regular human porn. If you put aside the small section of furries that produce zoo works like dolphins with thier prehensile winkies and such, there are basically one of two sets of things present in furry porn.... either A) tits and ass, or B) cock and balls.

While the general reaction of your average schmoe to seeing DD boobs and a near-clinical diagram of a vagina on a blue skunk girl is going to be initial shock and aversion, followed by at least a passing glance at the humanoid nudity, then passing it off as either novel, silly, or repugnant.... the furry allure is really just a novelty that repackages the focus of the image.... tits and ass.

Seeing cartoon animals exude a sense of sexuality isn't new. The female felines in Tom and Jerry were typically curvaceous. Fifi le Fume was the female counterpart of Pepe le Pew, who embodied the thrill of pursuing amorous encounters. Kath Soucie's ability to rather huskily drip sexuality from her voice didn't hurt, either. Minerva Mink was your cartoon animal equivalent of a blonde bombshell, and Lola Bunny... what little of Space Jam I saw, had your girl-next-door/tomboy element with the underlying tones of someone who could go from 0 to slut in 6.8 seconds under the right circumstances (or with enough Jack Daniels). As we've seen with Huslter Canada's mascot, cartoon animal mascots with a healthy dose of anthropomorphised human sexuality is hardly anything new. Hell, I've even seen a line of sugar-free ice cream products that uses a skinny cow with a modest bustline. Combining animal characters with elements of human sex appeal is hardly new or shocking. But, they're not meant to be serious wanking material.

I think what the furries miss, though, is that all of this is merely human sexuality dressed up differently. While furry porn has a xenophilic element, it's focus is still human sexuality. I'd dare say what often causes the aversion to a lot of furry porn is either the extreme exaggeration of genitalia (it seems rather evident when it's serious and when it's done in comedy), or the kinds of fetishes displayed in the images. I personally don't mind the more tasteful or Playboy-esque furry nudes. While I may not find them arousing, I at least appreciate the aesthetics of the pose, the colors used, etc.

When you start uploading cub art, tentacle rape, or stuff with furries peeing their pants as a sexual thing........ well...... I'll respect your freedom to upload such things.... but I may also exercise my freedom to mock it.

There's a few things that, in their own right, make the draw of furry porn to some people unsurprising (mind you, this is all just theorizing):

*It's easily accessable. With the large influx of teens to furry circles in the past few years, you're getting a lot of new furry fans that, at present, cannot legally acquire pornography. Of course, they may not be competent enough with web searches... or covering their tracks if they share a computer with their parents... to make Google's image search their first line of attack for acquiring porn. Furry porn isn't regulated on sites like Furnation (depending on the individual's page) and VCL. As such, if you're a lusty teen wanting to see some boobs... you may not care if it's on a pop idol or a humanoid skunk. VCL is easy to get to, so, there's your porn fix.

I remember in my teen years, before I could legally buy Playboy, and back in the BBS days, I could still buy artistic reference books and books on glamour photography. I'm not sure what logic dictated that I couldn't buy the pictures of naked women behind the counter... but I could buy pictures of equally naked women from the section labeled Art & Photography at the bookstore. As such, my T&A fix came largely from glamor photography books, artists' model photo-reference books, and racier publications from artists like Boris Vallejo and Frank Frazetta. Of course, I also legitimately used these books for honing my own artistic abilities... but it was also used for more clandestine purposes. These days, furry porn, for some of those that come across it, is just easy access to unregulated porn.

*Some of our first exposure to sexuality is through cartoon characters. Many of the WB cartoons, most notably, have a healthy dose of humor that is aimed at adults. Not to say it is "adult humor," but it is jokes and themes adults may appreciate, and kids may just find silly because they don't completely understand it. As such, we get to see Fifi, Lola, or Minerva vamping it up at an early age. I wouldn't be surprised if this somehow registers with the developing sexuality of the young viewers. Minerva using her feminine wiles to con her way out of winding up at the taxidermist (I hesitated to say "stuffed and mounted"... wait.... DUOH) is a display of human sexual behavior and, while younger viewers may not be able to fully understand what they're seeing, something somewhere in them tells them it's a good thing. In the cases of the extreme, furries, however, perhaps they wind up fixating on the animal cartoon, rather than the behavior portrayed. They confuse finding the behavior sexy with finding the animal sexy.

I can't speak for anyone else's experiences, but I can't say I ever really found myself experiencing "strange new feelings" as a kid over Fifi le Fume or the cat women in Tom & Jerry. I will say, however, that my first "furry crush" was Cheetara from Thundercats. Of course, she looked like little more than a human with 80's style feline makeup. To a young kid, those thunder thighs crammed into a spandex outfit was a first glimpse how pleasant the human body could be. And, ogling a cartoon character got you in a lot less trouble than staring at some bikini-clad girl on the beach... since, doing one was obvious to your parents... doing the other just looked like you were a breakfast cereal zombie on Saturday mornings.

*Being part of our baser instincts, sex does have its animal-like qualities. Not to suggest bending your wife over the coffee table is the same as seeing bears humping on Animal Planet, but, sex is simultaneously part of our higher functions (in that we are cognizant of it and can enjoy it on levels animals can't) and part of our basic drives (the insticnt to perpetuate the species (often to excess in the poorer, more Bible-thumping portions of the population :D)). Much of our sexual terminology has ties to its more animalistic side. "Macho," if I remember correctly, actually refers to bulls in Spanish or Portugese or something. (I remember someone mentioning "macho bull" is a redundant term). We have the term "animal magnetism." We sometimes have sex "doggie style" (the derivation of that term being a bit more of a visual description than a term for something less tangible). We use colognes and perfumes to appeal to senses in the ways animals might use pheremones. Our clubbing outfits could be seen as basically an artificial form of mating plumage. We "show our moves" on the dance floor in a fashion similar to animals doing mating displays (usually looking about as silly as some animals in the process).

As such, sex itself has many animal-like connotations. Many peole find women dressed in fur coats, or on fur rugs alluring. This is unsurprising, as fur has a textural, sensual quality. We have Playboy "bunnies" in little cotton tails and ears. Looking at the Halloween stores that are now opening, cat and mouse costumes for women are well-stocked. In a way, this might all be considered an expression of the animal side of sex, and also a bit of a xenophilic titilation. It's alluring in its novelty. In light of these notions, really, a purple-furred skunk femme is not too far removed from a sexy woman dressed in a bikini and wearing a pair of fake cat ears. Of course, most of us would prefer to lust after the real woman than the imaginary cartoon one. Which brings me to my next theory...

*Nekkid cartoon critters are "safe." Since a lot of furries these days are teens and young adults.... or adults that never really matured during those socially formative years.... they're at a point in their lives where they are discovering and exploring their human sexuality. Cartoon animal characters have been used to "soften the blow" for many gritty realities. McGruff and.. uh... whoever the McGruff puppy kid is.... is used to help approach children with topics related to crime, kidnapping, child molestation, etc. Many fire departments use a cartoon dalmation mascot on brochures and other materials for children helping them learn about fire safety. Animal characters are used to take the edge off of many topics that are often considered a bit too much of a dose of harsh reality for kids. As such, I can kind of see where cute cartoon critters with boobs might not be quite as intimidating to youths who are exploring their sexuality as photographs of real people.

Additionally, much of our society teaches us that nude photography... or almost any depiction of the nude form created after the Renaissance is "wrong" and "pornographic." With the abundancy of porn and adult magazines, much of American society basically lumps any photographic image of a nude human into the category of "pornographic." There seems to be this paradox where, if it's photographed, it's porn.. and if it's drawn, it's "art." How many times have we seen a furry image that has absolutely no artistic merit or sense of aesthetics, but yet the furries quickly defend it as art?

Kids often discover masturbation before they even know there's a word for it. Naturally, youths and young adults (depending on when you start indulging your developing sexuality) will seek out sexually arousing stimuli (males moreso visually than females, so they say). If they swipe their father's Playboys, or Victoria's Secret catalogs... or open up to the bra secion of the Sears cataloge... or squirrel away a copy of National Geographic (don't get many tribal boobies in there anymore).... there may be associated feelings of guilt. They think they are doing something "bad" by looking at photographs of nude women (or men). If it's drawn, on the other hand.. like furry images.. then it's "art." Maybe it doesn't seem as bad. I don't know. But maybe the fluffy cartoon animals sporting big boobs and dripping phalluses is considered "less bad" by many of them. Who knows.

I think furry porn is often a case of bait-and-switch. It seems like the furries fixate on the animal characters. And many of the furries themselves may feel the allure is particularly the animal characters. But, really, I think it's the expression of human sexuality that gives it allure. Even for someone as anti-human as EbonLupus, the depiction of a sexual act between two animals is really registering on a level of human sexuality. Even buying into the arguement of recreational sex occuring in the animal kingdom, humans are cognizant of the sex act on many more levels than animals. As such, I'd dare say it is impossible to for humans to totally detach themselves from human sexuality and think of it in the same terms that animals do. So, furry porn, ranging from the simple nudes to the extreme zoo fetish stuff is really little more than something that appeals on some level to our human sexuality.

When it's all said and done, it's still basically human tits, ass, pussy, cocks and balls. The anthro animals are basically just a fuzzy gift wrap on human sexuality that is maybe a bit of novelty for some, and confusion for others.

Or I'm just totally full of crap.


You should submit this. That would be fun.
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SquareSoft0
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Joined: 07 Sep 2004
Posts: 143

Posted: 10/1/2004 3:46:01 AM     Post subject:  

Or I'm just totally full of crap.

That must be it :wink:
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