- Joined
- May 6, 2019
I decide to check outside my little corner and find a new level of hell with... what can only be described as eldritch terrors.We have chips and cola.
These have to be deliberately terrible, yes?
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I decide to check outside my little corner and find a new level of hell with... what can only be described as eldritch terrors.We have chips and cola.
There's a man inside that hyena suit, isn't there?Could be worse.
[Gifs of unspeakable horrors]
A good amount of furries like to show their kinks very out in the open to the point that they... well...
The description of that pic states "This time, LandisF has fallen victim to her appetite, though I doubt they're complaining~" So yes...There's a man inside that hyena suit, isn't there?
WellAt least nobody has made an actual cock vore suit that would be fucking islamic
When I was in college I ended up taking an "art" class where at one point the professor gave us a live tour of Second Life where she was oblivious to all of the sexual content we were just skirting around. At the end of it she thought the experience had been so successful that she wanted to do a sequel tour where she could show us all of the "vore art installations" because she found them so interesting. I actually legit think she had no idea that any of this was a fetish if you are at all wondering.Oh man this kinda reminded me of that guy who is getting funded by his state to teach about vore.
Never underestimate the power of weaponized horny.Well
Not yet at least.
She knew, she just wanted to scar you all.I actually legit think she had no idea that any of this was a fetish if you are at all wondering.
WHAT!?that guy who is getting funded by his state to teach about vore.
Yeen is just a furry slang as far as I'm aware. And btw I also found this fursuiter's carrd: https://quartzyeen.carrd.co/ Other than more of that fursuit there's not much to look at here.ive become cautious whenever i see a hyena referred to as a "yeen" in any context
WHAT!?
When I was in college I ended up taking an "art" class where at one point the professor gave us a live tour of Second Life where she was oblivious to all of the sexual content we were just skirting around. At the end of it she thought the experience had been so successful that she wanted to do a sequel tour where she could show us all of the "vore art installations" because she found them so interesting. I actually legit think she had no idea that any of this was a fetish if you are at all wondering.
convinced you can put the word 'queer' before your job title and that gives you leeway to do effectively anything, theres such percieved exoticism behind that descriptorAnd Now about the guy who teaches vore...
i WILL have to disagree with you on that assertion alone, the discussion of fetishes can be valid and introspective in many fields of study, including philosophyno, there's nothing philosophically deep about fetishes
I genuinely believe that there should be more research on why people develop fetishes, specially since there's a lot of people with kinks nowadays.convinced you can put the word 'queer' before your job title and that gives you leeway to do effectively anything, theres such percieved exoticism behind that descriptor
i WILL have to disagree with you on that assertion alone, the discussion of fetishes can be valid and introspective in many fields of study, including philosophy
but you have to approach it FROM a philosophical point of view, whereas what often happens in practice is that it's used as an excuse to validate and proverbially masturbate themselves using other people
This. It genuinely fascinates me. What has to happen to a person to develop a fetish like being transformed into table legs or wanting to fuck toasters? I know these sorts of fetishes have always been around in some form or another, but why does it happen - even to perfectly normal people who have been raised in a decent, respectable environment? I've tried looking at research papers but there's very few of them and most of it is swamped by queer journalism that proudly states: "It's a-ok to have a fetish about having your genitals replaced with mangoes!" and other such statements, rather than provide scientific or genuine psychological evidence. It's painfully frustrating.I genuinely believe that there should be more research on why people develop fetishes, specially since there's a lot of people with kinks nowadays.
My guess is over exposure to the internet and just going down weird rabbit holes. People tend to get bored of the same thing and given how quick and easily accessible porn is now I'm noticing a trend of people going to greater and greater extremes; add in communities of people who are more depraved pushing and exposing newcomers to the greater and greater extremes and it starts to make more sense. With the turned into table leg people I'd imagine it's someone naturally submissive and looking to be dominated and just going to a greater and greater extreme as time goes on or having a combination with subject two you mentioned, wanting to fuck toasters. Some people have a weird attraction to certain objects, I'd imagine most healthy people it's something like boots or a maid outfit where the object is part of a normal sexual encounter (example being their partner or 2D thing they're jerking to wearing those) and not required but a preference to the experience and then just kinda, let that thought spiral enough until you get them wanting to fuck or be the boot.This. It genuinely fascinates me. What has to happen to a person to develop a fetish like being transformed into table legs or wanting to fuck toasters? I know these sorts of fetishes have always been around in some form or another, but why does it happen - even to perfectly normal people who have been raised in a decent, respectable environment? I've tried looking at research papers but there's very few of them and most of it is swamped by queer journalism that proudly states: "It's a-ok to have a fetish about having your genitals replaced with mangoes!" and other such statements, rather than provide scientific or genuine psychological evidence. It's painfully frustrating.
She knew, she just wanted to scar you all.
I wish I remained blissfully ignorant. I wish I stayed within my world of delusions in thinking she was merely an ignorant blithering idiot, but you are both right. I looked her up and found "tranimals" and a bunch of eating and food related research papers. Link ArchiveWe will never fully know if she was into it or not, but I might as well mention that I have spotted an increasing in girls developing all sort of fetishes and paraphilias, many fetish artists I have stumbled are women, usually trans men.
I personally would suggest to check out what is she up to nowadays.
Forthcoming | |
2023 | Kelley, Lindsay. After Eating: Metabolizing the Arts. Cambridge: MIT Press. (In press, anticipated publication December 2023.) https://mitpress.mit.edu/9780262545631/after-eating/ Kelley, Lindsay. “Digesting the Anthropocene: From the figure of the ‘Anthropos’ to multispecies technosocial futures.” Encyclopedia of New Media Art. London: Bloomsbury (accepted July 2022). Kelley, Lindsay. “Bake Together: Kitchen power, soft power, and the battle for together” Australian Feminist Studies, special issue on Creating Feminist Futures ed. Rebecca Coleman and Katrina Jungnickel (submitted May 2023). |
Scholarly books | |
2016 | Kelley, Lindsay. Bioart Kitchen: Art, Feminism, and Technoscience. London: IB Tauris. Reissued in paperback by Bloomsbury, 2022. |
Refereed Journal Articles | |
2023 | Kelley, Lindsay. “Invert Syrup, Feminist Snap: Anzac Biscuits and Feminist Resistance to Imperial Logics.” Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience (anticipated publication March 2023, accepted 29 November 2022). |
2022 | Kelley, Lindsay. “Biscuit Production and Consumption as War Re-enactment.” Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies (https://doi.org/10.1080/10304312.2022.2106357). |
2017 | Kelley, Lindsay. ‘The Political Life of Cancer: Beatriz da Costa's Dying for the Other and Anti-Cancer Survival Kit.’ Environmental Humanities 9 (2): 230-254. |
Kelley, Lindsay. 2017. ‘Digesting Wetlands: Cooking and Eating Across Species.’ Leonardo Electronic Almanac 22 (1): 152-159. | |
Kelley, Lindsay. 2017. ‘Menagerie a` Tranimals.’ Angelaki: Journal of Theoretical Humanities 22(2): 97-109. | |
2014 | Kelley, Lindsay. ‘Tranimals.’ TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 1 (1-2): 226-228. |
2013 | Kelley, Lindsay, and Eva Hayward. ‘Carnal Light.’ parallax 19 (1): 114-127. |
2009 | Kelley, Lindsay. ‘Mail Away: War correspondence at home and online.’ media-N 5 (2). |
Scholarly Book Chapters | |
2022 | Kelley, Lindsay. “Everyday militarisms in the kitchen: Baking strange with Anzac biscuits.” In Food in Memory and Imagination: Place, Space and Taste, edited by Beth Forrest and Greg de St Maurice. London: Bloomsbury. |
2021 | Kelley, Lindsay. “Hard Tack.” In Feminist, Queer, Anticolonial Propositions for Hacking the Anthropocene: Archive, edited by Jennifer Mae Hamilton, Susan Reid, Pia van Gelder and Astrida Neimanis. London: Open Humanities Press. |
Kelley, Lindsay. 'Menagerie À Tranimals.' In Tranimacies Intimate Links Between Animal and Trans* Studies, edited by Eliza Steinbock; Marianna Szczygielska; Anthony Clair Wagner. London: Routledge. | |
2020 | Kelley, Lindsay. “Geophagiac: Art, Food, Dirt.” In Thinking with Soils: Material Politics and Social Theory, edited by Juan Francisco Salazar, Céline Granjou, Matthew Kearnes, Anna Krzywoszynska, and Manuel Tironi. London: Bloomsbury. |
2018 | Kelley, Lindsay. ‘Food.’ In The Edinburgh Companion to Animal Studies, edited by Lynn Turner, Undine Sellbach and Ronald Broglio. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. |
2017 | Kelley, Lindsay. ‘Transanimality.’ In Gender: Animals, Macmillan Interdisciplinary Handbooks, edited by Juno Parreñas, 37-52. Farmington Hills, MI: Macmillan. |
Kelley, Lindsay. ‘Cooking and Eating Across Species with Natalie Jeremijenko’s Cross(x)Species Adventure Club.’ In The Taste of Art: Food as Counterculture in Contemporary Practices, edited by Silvia Botinelli and Margherita d'Ayala Valva, 279-292. Fayetteville: University of Arkansas Press. | |
2014 | Kelley, Lindsay. ‘Plumpiñon.’ In The Multispecies Salon: Gleanings from a Para-Site, edited by Eben Kirksey, 122-134. Chapel Hill: Duke University Press. |
Its either that or some type of event in their childhood.My guess is over exposure to the internet and just going down weird rabbit holes
They'll have largely neutered themselves through the state sponsored gender special programs before they've had any chance of even attempting a real adult relationship so I suspect that their reaction will be a lot of suicide.Its either that or some type of event in their childhood.
The next 10-20 years are gonna be absolutely wild though as the current crop of youngins whove had unfettered access to the cesspool that is social media come into adulthood and grapple with their utterly destroyed sexuality.
The fursuits aren't that terrible, especially compared to everything else on here, at least they are pricing it way lower than the average cost for one.For just $900, she can be yours!
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Can you recognize the character?
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yay blueyfags!
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>engaged
>18yo
>"full time fursuit maker"
>pacifier icon
>raptormasks, so many raptormasks
And then I found these while looking for dragon fursuits.That punch has been making the rounds lately, and I love how every furry out there assumes it was a targeted murder attempt and a prelude to furry genocide when it was clearly the asshole just bouncing around swinging at whoever was in front of him.
At least we have all learned a valuable lesson: fursuit heads are not protective gear.
...And now I just realize that it will be a matter of time before someone gets shoved inside one of these like with QuartzYeen.I love me some hyper fetish suits *Drops some fuckery*
Maybe we will be able to see some actual research in the future or maybe things will stay the same as today, we can only hope for now...This. It genuinely fascinates me. What has to happen to a person to develop a fetish like being transformed into table legs or wanting to fuck toasters? I know these sorts of fetishes have always been around in some form or another, but why does it happen - even to perfectly normal people who have been raised in a decent, respectable environment? I've tried looking at research papers but there's very few of them and most of it is swamped by queer journalism that proudly states: "It's a-ok to have a fetish about having your genitals replaced with mangoes!" and other such statements, rather than provide scientific or genuine psychological evidence. It's painfully frustrating.