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    A Furry Friend: An Autoethnography on the Relationship Between Gender Identity and Fursonas

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    Author
    Pfingston, Ben
    Affiliation
    University of Southern Indiana
    Title
    A Furry Friend: An Autoethnography on the Relationship Between Gender Identity and Fursonas
    
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12419/609
    Embedded YouTube Video
    https://youtu.be/Bk3smeGu3tA
    Abstract
    Transgender people identify as a gender other than the one assigned to them at birth, whether this is male, female, or something else entirely. Furries are people who have an interest in anthropomorphic animals, and many have a “fursona”, or an animal representation of the self. Furries often use fursonas to reflect a sexual or gender identity. LGBT+ people are a majority in the furry fandom, and there are more transgender people than in the general population. Given that transgender people are more common in the furry community, research looking into the relationship between gender development and furry identity could yield interesting insights. The following project is an autoethnography done by a trans man who is a furry. His previous and current fursonas were dated and redrawn. Then, these fursonas were analyzed based on appearance and the author’s life events at the time, with a focus on his relationship to his gender. The analysis indicates that, not only did his fursonas change with his gender, but that the fursonas themselves were used as a tool for gender exploration. The use of a fursona to explore gender was useful in many ways, including it being risk-free in terms of internal discomfort as well as externally. These findings may be significant for people who are looking for a safe way to explore their relationship with their gender.
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