Exploring other-than-human identity: A narrative approach to otherkin, therianthropes, and vampires

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Abstract

Drawing on in-depth, narrative interviews with 24 self-identified Otherkin, Therianthropes, and Vampires, we explore how members of these communities navigate Bamberg’s three “dilemmatic spaces” or tensions of continuity/change, similarity/difference, and person-to-world/world-to-person fit. With regard to the first, we identify four aetiological narratives (walk-ins, reincarnation, trapped soul, and evolutionary soul), and discuss stories of shifts and awakening. For the second, we discuss how participants manage the similarity/difference tension with regard to themselves and humans, and explore categorical and renunciatory othering within the communities. Finally, we explore the ways in which members of the communities experience a barren narrative environment, and ways they seek to construct storyworlds and narrative resources as frames for establishing their identities.

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Baldwin, C., & Ripley, L. (2020). Exploring other-than-human identity: A narrative approach to otherkin, therianthropes, and vampires. Qualitative Sociology Review, 16(3), 8–26. https://doi.org/10.18778/1733-8077.16.3.02

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