Therians

From AnOtherWiki, the free encyclopedia written by, for, and about the Otherkin community.
The Theta-Delta is used by many as the symbol for therianthropy.

Therians (also known as therianthropes or animal people) are individuals who identify as an animal that is known to exist (or to have existed) on Earth. Sometimes, more 'feral' creatures that are not known to exist are included as well, such as dragons, griffons, and sea serpents. The exact definition of therianthropy varies significantly, a condition increased by the fact that the explanation for therianthropy varies wildly depending on who is being talked to (common explanations include reincarnation, conditioning, atypical neurology, and atypical psychology).


Origins

The term, therians, is derived from therianthropy, which is the over all name for the therian experience. Therianthropy comes the Greek words therion, meaning "wild animal" or "beast", and anthropos, meaning "human being".[1]The modern use for therianthropy first arose in 1994 on the alt.horror.werewolves Usenet discussion group as a label for general animal-people, since some felt that lycanthropy was too specific.[2]


History

The history of therianthropy in its current form is a fairly short one, reaching back to around the Usenet era of the Internet. Nonetheless, tropes and ideas integral to therianthropy have been present since very early in human history, and animal-human hybrids can be found in many cultures, most notably the Ancient Egyptians.[1]

Egypt

The deities of Egypt are widely famed for being depicted as part human and part animal, and in the modern era they have been absorbed into neopagan practicesCite error: Invalid <ref> tag; invalid names, e.g. too many, science fiction[3], anthropomorphic art[4], and the beliefs of some therianthropes and otherkin[5]. In addition to the more famous deities (Sekhmet, Bast, Anubis, and Thoth), a host of other Egyptian deities had associated animals. Isis, for example, was associated with the kite, and Hekt had the head of a frog.

Animals themselves were held to be of import. They were not worshipped, as is often thought to be the case, but were instead regarded as associated with the deity in question. An Egyptian would no more worship a cat or crocodile than a Chrisitan would worship a cross, or a Jew a Torah, but they were treated with high degrees of respect because of their association with the deity. Animals associated with deities, including cats, fish, crocodiles, and ibises, were mummified and buried in tombs as a sign of this respect.

It should be noted that, due to the highly variable nature of Egyptian religion, the above cannot be said to be universally true with certainty.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 . Wikipedia:Therianthropy
          http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Therianthropy. (accessed April 2, 1012).
  2. Sandstorrm, Orion. 2011. Otherkin Timeline: The recent history of elfin, fae, and animal people
         Online: http://orion.kitsune.net.
  3. Template:‘’Stargate’‘. Dir. Roland Emmerich. MGM, 1994. Film.
  4. Dark Natasha. The Art of Dark Natasha
          htp://darknatasha.com/#!gallery=fantasy. (accessed April 11, 2012).
  5. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named ”Re”