Human* Being

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American studies
animism
Anthropology
avatars
bodies
Cartesian dualism
Category=JBC
Category=JBSW
Category=JHMC
colonialism
digital anthropology
digital culture
digital ethnography
elves
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnography
forthcoming
identity
internet
internet culture
LGBT
LGBTQ
media studies
moral panics
ontology
Otherkin
Pagan
phenomenology
platform studies
queer
queer studies
social media
Sylvia Wynter
therian
trans
trans studies
vampire

Product details

  • ISBN 9781643151038
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 Aug 2026
  • Publisher: Michigan Publishing Services
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Human* Being: On Otherkin Identity and Digital Community is an ethnographic exploration of the Otherkin—a technologically-mediated community of practice whose members identify as other-than-human—breaking down barriers of identity and calling into question assumptions about what it means to be a human. Based on a decade of ethnographic research, Human* Being examines Otherkin engagement with the techno-virtuality afforded by the internet—through chat forums, personal blogs, 3D virtual worlds, Facebook, YouTube, Tumblr, Discord, TikTok, and Reddit—troubling conventional notions about our relationships with the virtual and our understandings of the Self. The Otherkin represent a larger shift in body identity, shown by increasing numbers of people identifying as trans, nonbinary, fluid, and neurodiverse; bodies open to nuance, complication, and multiplicity. Devin Proctor closely examines internal community debates about the limits of non-human identity, avatar creation practices in virtual worlds to approximate inner realities, and the policing of identity constructs toward a stable definition of the phenomenon. However anomalistic, even fantastical they may seem, the Otherkin offer a window into our own complex notions of bodies, Selves, and technologies.

Devin Proctor is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Elon University. He explores digital culture, identity construction, and new media.