FURRY RESOURCES

LAST UPDATE:

October the 28th, 2002: Fixed things, and added three essays, two of them being a reading I recommend to anyone seriously wondering why the furry fandom doesn't manage to get out of its shell.

Comment, broken links reports and suggestions to rangifer@mailhaven.com.

This is the place where I keep links and documents about the most theoretical aspects of the furry movement. It is something I found myself very interested into after the years I have passed dealing with the fandom so far, and something which I find extremely neglected at the same. The purpose of this section is to offer an overview of sites and texts which I belive are essential to fully understand the meaning and especially the unexploited potentials of the furry movement, as well as links to opinion pieces on hot issues about drawing and writing. I'm using the term "movement" here, along with of the usual "fandom", for it much better expresses my feeling towards the concept of furry. I firmly think furry might be much, much more than a mere commercial phenomenon... if not a true cultural movement, certainly a movement which might bring and develop many new ideas in the fields of art and literature, if only enough people would realize its potential and the strength of certain concepts it introduces. A "fandom" tends to be just a world apart from the "mainstream" world rather than attempting to influence it -- something which furry'd instead have all the tools to do. I'm getting the impression instead that a lot of effort is put in stating why one considers himself a furry (like there's any need to justify one's interests!) or in justifying/accusing various behaviours, while very little is done in the attempt to create masterpieces of whatever theme or alignment, art or writing any furry would be proud to be associated with for its quality, besides of its content. For example, look at the recent evolution of genetic engineering and biology. The furry movement is obviously anticipating ideas and events which will have a serious impact on the human society one day, so why they're not taken seriously, not even by furries themselves? Just take this page as an invitation to reflect.

NOTE 1: The site is permanently under construction, and so far I haven't found that much material on the issues, so If you want to suggest an inherent site or article, don't be afraid, you're welcome any time. :-)

NOTE 2: I am putting here exclusively what I think are useful pages and expression of constructive behaviour and ideas, i.e. no ranting against singles, no furry politics, and no bashing of whatever group. Please don't submit such things.

IMPORTANT NOTE: If you agree with the point of view I am expressing on this page, please link directly to http://www.furholt.net/~scale/resources.html, even if you don't want to link to the main page. One more link does make the difference on the net.

1. Introduction to the Furry Movement

Frequently Asked questions about furries. What is a furry, how the movement was born, furries on the web, important things to know.

2. Essential Essays

I don't like the world "essential" used this way, but those essays really stand out too much to put them among the others...

  • On Furries, part one and especially part two by Kaijima - Two essays I dare to call a milestone for the furry fandom. I beg you to read this even if the rest of my page doesn't interest you. This is simply THE definitive statement of the core self-limitation problem of the furry movement, the first furry essay I've seen so far which really aims high. For further insight on the same topic, other essays by the same author might be of some interest, especially The 10+1 laws of Therianthropy and Guilt by association.

3. Selected Sites

Sites dedicated to articles and essays on the theoretical aspects of furry and the evolution of the furry scene.

  • Fuzzy Logic - An e-zine hosting furry fiction, critique and opinion pieces. Sadly has not been updated in a long time. Highligths:
    • Fan Writing - On the poor average quality of furry stories. Writing in fact tends to be a bit undervalued in respect to drawing.
    • Escapism vs. Embracism by M.C.A. Hogart - Short, direct, and very effective. Sitting upon stereotypes and forgetting logic against true creative behaviour.
    • Last of the Non-Instantaneous Generation by Melissa Drake - Overview of the advanteges and the disadvantages brought to the movement by the Internet. A very relevant concept emerges here: the lack of quality material can be a powerful source of inspiration, with which I completely agree.
  • Pressed Fur - Collection of various resources, keeps track of the media coverage of furry and groups critical of the movement. It's an absolutely essential topic, and they were the first people to realize it and react properly, appearently. This is one of the few attempts so far to cover both light and dark sides of the movement and present different points of view, with many articles, essays, and reports. Besides of any other consideration, definitely worth reading. Highligths:
    • Sitting On the Third Side of the Fence by Hannah Kincaid ("Essays" section) - A thought-provoking disenchanted essay taking a firm point against the belief that furry should be reduced to mere unquestioned hobby. Gives a very personal point of view upon a possible "third way" among furries, pointing out the importance of creative thinking above imposition or spite of rules.
    • Furry Define Thyself: An Essay on the Word and the Fandom by Xepher ("Essays" section) - Trust me, this is one to read and meditate about carefully. The concept is clear, and the problem described here is something I've been noticing myself lately, and something I'm often affected by as well. :-P Furries fear to talk about their interest outside of the fandom. It's something which happens for good reasons at times, but most of the times it happens for no actual reason. Overall it's so harmful that I'm coming to think most of the problems experienced by our community descend from this one, one way or the other...
  • Flayrah.com - A portal for furry news and information. In addition to general info regarding conventions and furry comics/books, also some very interesting news are reported, such as animal-related scientific discoveries, news from zoo parks, and even furry-realted oddities (not only those based on the web, which is pretty rare indeed). The mission statement of offering a source of informations better than the newsgroups is IMHO being pretty fulfilled.
  • The Funny Animals Liberation Front - And I get angry. Really really angry. Why in the heck initiatives like this old site, attempts to point out all the crap that is strangling the furry scene, end up this way? I haven't written anything new here, that's the disturbing thing. Four years after this site has been abandoned (1998), every single essay therein still applies perfectly to the furry scene. Highlights:
    • R = X by M.C.A. Hogarth - Explaining why, contrary to a misconception widespread thorough the furry community, nudity doesn't equal sexuality and porn. My comics are also an attempt to prove this fact.
    • When Money Talks, yet no one listens by John Boulton - Short and direct, but it's a good insight on the lack of quality in the furry fandom, and still applies today. The thesis is that as far as furries work with "the fandom" itself in mind as a target, only learning from the fandom (a big merit of Yerf is that of hosting a lot of people who do actually learn from other artists and sources as well) there's no hope their work will ever be noticed outside. I fully agree... it's nearly unbelivable somebody still thinks that people outside of the fandom would pay half a penny for a furry version of Star Wars, Star Trek, or The Lord of the Rings.
    • "...this represents everything that's wrong..." by WM - Or, why FurryMUCK is the last place in the world where to look for criticism.
    • Fandom, Furries and Standards by WM - Another silly behaviour which deserved to be denounced. The technical quality of a picture has nothing to do with its conten, minimum required quality doesn't mean censorship. While it is good to have environments open to every skill level (everybody has to start somewhere!), I'm getting to think that some quality control, at least on the most representative archives, might be a positive fact. Furry archives are not the place for stuff which isn't accepted anywhere else, simply. They are if we're talking of provocative content, but they are not if we're talking of aesthetic (IMHO, that is). A person who actually cares expressing through art should also be motivated into getting better, and that's something the furry community is unable to do at the moment, since honest and competent critique is hard to find, and the only rewarded achievement seems to be the thickness of the artist's commissions schedule and prints portfolio. Furry artists with good ideas I've ofteen seen progressing very slowly on the technical side, because their work isn't "popular" and doesn't get the praise empty pin-ups are submerged with. But we do need raw technical skill to be combined with good ideas, desperately. I might be wrong, but I think people complain so loudly about the presence of fetishism and kinks in furry art just because it happens to be poor quality stuff - the artists aren't motivated into becoming better, since the content is judged "unworthy" anyway. So I'm all for making it clear that content and technical execution of a picture are very different things.

4. Articles and Essays

Other opinion pieces about furry (and sometimes related topics) not included in the sites above.

  • Something Amiss In The Fandom by Simion Lonewolf - Still pretty readable for a "rant", I've included it here because of a couple hot topics it quickly touches: rip-offs and easy selling. The issue is put in the terms of furry drawings being a source of fame and money much more than stories, resulting in an invitation to rip-offs and sitting on the same worn schemes. I don't completely agree with this piece but some of the mentioned problems are undeniably real...
  • The Uncanny Valley by Dave Bryant - Why are monster-movie zombies so horrifying and talking animals so fascinating? The author exposes an interesting theory upon the topic of human feelings against antropomorphic creatures, pointing out how, if we consider different degrees of similarity as an axis of a graph, there is a point before which (and shortly after which) the feeling is good and the interest high, but at which the similarity makes most people uneasy for some reason. These observations may be of more than some interest for those willing to study the mechanics beyond art and fiction.
  • Furverts and their Critics by Bill - I wonder how it is possible that still today there are people hoping to see the furry scene ridden of sex and "pervert" stuff. I mean, come on! After over 20 years of endless flames and initiatives which led to absolutely no result, perhaps it's the time to ask ourselves if sensuality and sex (they're very different things) are't an essential component of furry art, instead, which thus cannot be separated from it. Absurd? Not quite, not quite. This article just enforces my belief that sensuality is the true power and originality of the concept of furry, and that it's just because of massive brainwashing of the immense value of sensuality in our lives that even many furries are afraid to admit it openly. But it's a fact. Of course furry deals a lot with nudity and sex: it was about time to discover again the importance of the senses after a few centuries of oblivion.
  • Of Furries and Hoomans by JD - Excellent essay about the most annoying slang/commonplace somewhat widespread among furries. Nothing pisses me off more than this "Furries Are Better Than Humans" attitude. Why such ideas? Specism against one's own species isn't any bit better than the specism against furries that is so exploited in furry fiction.
  • Furry Sociology - One thing furries are in bad need of are observations based on actual numbers, and collected with some method. Here's an interesting attempt at this, dealing with an issue often plagued by commonplaces. Not fully agreeable, yet it shows motivation, and I'd like to see more initiatives like this one...

5. Good Ideas!

Specific ideas and concepts which I find to be an exceptional example of how the crafting of an antropomorphic animal should be accurate. Furry stories and comics I find really exceptional will also be signaled here.

  • Tuber With a Tie by M.C.A. Hogarth (on Fuzzy Logic, see above) - An example of logic applied to furry crafting: hints and ideas about language and communication.
  • Through Alien Eyes 1: "How to Build a Wolf" by J. Woodman (on Fuzzy Logic, see above) - Describing a wolven civilization. Remarkable is the attention to the world's characters and the influences on the wolves's evolution.
  • More Than Just Cut and Paste by Brendan Dunn (on Fuzzy Logic, see above) - A hint, still more than enough convincing, at why Genetic Engineering isn't just a Jack-of-all-trades allowing to flank any problem and add any feature...
  • An Introduction to Chakats by Bernard Doove - Most furries know what a "chakat" is, but how many people actually red carefully this full introduction by their creator? This is a little jewel of detail, planning, and thinking of all aspects of a furry species. Of course not every creature is as peculiar as a chakat, nor requires a lot of anathomy details added to its description, still this is a good sample of how no aspect of a creature should be left untouched or overlooked as "obvious" - though Doove still makes the error of willingly ignoring the ethical issues involved in Genetic Engineering, presenting a rather positivistic vision of its employment. My main critic (besides of the fact the scientific name isn't correct latin) is that nobody seems to care touching the issue of casualties and failed experiments which would be unavoidable in order to create something like the Chakats. Note that this problem is present in many other furry settings and stories... Well worth reading and reflecting upon anyway.
  • The Otter's Mom di Chris Wayan - The best furry comic I've seen so far. This one is a single panel with many interesting graphical ideas telling a serious story. Original, visionary and thought-provoking.

6. Furry Critic - from the inside

AT LAST!! Incredible... attempts to start up Methodic Furry Critic? Criticizing quality and sense of the reviewed stuff rather than plainly wishing for censorship? Woah! Just a shy beginning, but since I think furries badly need something like that, here it is. Keep an eye on this sort of initiatives...

  • The Furry Critic - For now it hosts mostly reviews of furry comics (also has sections for 'zines and games). Seems quite promising, and eventually tells exactly what needs to be told about the quality of plots and graphics. It's looking for staff and contributors. Only bad note: he gave thumbs down to "Lilo and Stitch"! :-P Which I found to be a Disney movie much above the average for the surprisingly sticky issues it dealt with...

7. Furry Critic - from the outside

"We're Persecuted"?? Sorry, I'm way tired of hearing people complain about how much furries are persecuted, misunderstood, unaccepted and such crap. I see a lot of self-isolation, rather. Non-furry people do happen to say things which make sense too, and I'm gathering some here. When somebody states he doesn't like furry stuff and provides a reason for it, it's the occasion to learn something about potential audience. I do find sincerely constructive reading what people have to say against furry.

  • Anthro VS Furry... FIGHT! thread on the "Microcosm" comic strip's forum - A very intelligent note on an actual problem of the furry scene, by a person who doesn't consider himself a furry. And this fact itself is the problem, actually. It's one less talented person for the furry movement, and one more person who thinks that most furries don't care about originality. The fact he appreciates Chris Goodwin's talent only makes the situation more absurd.
  • An Impassioned Plea Against Furry Art by Max L. - Despite the title, this one points out very real problems. Quote: "Furry art (or a furry artist) is usually typified as drawing ONLY furry art, or ONLY commenting on other furry art, or ONLY accepting cute pencil drawings of fuzzy critters as 'art' (along with, perhaps, some classics or if they are truly progressive, more modern paintings). The scope of 'furry art' is what truly annoys me - cute furry animals, drawn freehand or with a computer. Sculpture, photographs, or perhaps even more interesting and original ideas are RIGHT OUT - this even generalizes more specifically to unacceptance of these media outside the tiny little world of 'furry art'. This is why I propose that 'furry art' be referred to in a slightly more derogatory and true form as 'furry genre illustration'." Is she completely wrong?
  • To be or not to be? by "Klawzie" - I'm including this as an example of how the concept of "furry" can be treated as a silly label. Most furries say they hate labels and stereotyping, but then why does this sort of things happen? On one side there are some people who don't care about anything that isn't openly labeled "furry" and worship anything that is (IMHO it's also the only reason for which most furry comics are still in business, and I think I have all the right to say so as a reader); on the other, people who feel the "furry" label is suffocating and hints at all sort of silly fanboy-ish behaviour. Only result: more isolation for the former, more isolation for the latter... geez.

8. Texts by me

Regarding some of the mentioned topics.

  • My two cents on some Furry Themes - IMHO there is an incredible lot of serious issues which can be discussed interestingly and thoroughly with the tools the concept of furry provides than they could be by any other mean or genre. Here are some appearently not obvious examples.

 

Snow-covered Fur - The Kerashant Chronicles, characters, artwork and site content are (C) 2002 Alessio Scalerandi.