Dragon

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Revision as of 00:21, 27 February 2023 by imported>Missingno

A dragon is a legendary creature found in many world cultures. It is the species identity of many otherkin, therians, and other nonhumans. The dragon community has historically been considered discrete from the otherkin community, as it has a separate origin and culture associated with it.[1] People could be a member of this community on the basis of being otherkin, a therian, a furry, or even sometimes simply a fan of dragons. The words 'draconic' and 'dracanthrope' have been used as labels for members of this community, instead of or alongside other labels. In particular, 'draconic' and 'dragon otherkin' were increasingly used interchangeably over time. In recent years, the dragon community has been almost completely subsumed into the general otherkin community.[1]

Just as in mythology and popular culture, a dragon is defined as being many different things by the many people who identify as one. Despite this diversity, many dragons have expressed a sense of sharing some common essence with other dragons, and this is the basis on which they form a community.

Experiences

As the word 'dragon' can be applied to a diversity of forms, many dragons inherently have very little in common with each other,[2] though some resources acknowledge that the traditional Western dragon and Eastern lung are common types for people to identify as.[3] Some dragons have also documented descriptions of remembered forms which they share in common with others.[4] Still, dragons may experience their form as being reptilian, mammalian, avian, or something else entirely. They may feel that their form can breathe fire or has some other kind of elemental affiliation, and their form may or may not have wings.[2][5]

Some draconic writers have argued that it is pointless to try and define what a dragon is at all.[6] In spite of this, many dragons agree that there is some kind of essential draconic nature which they recognize in themselves and each other, regardless of form.[2][5][7]

Additionally, while they are far from universal, some experiences are reported more frequently than others. In an analysis of the contents of conversations about dragons on the Alt+H Discord server, mordecai midas described a number of trends. Common experiences included having cat-like mannerisms, strange or tense relationships to divine beings, and strong instinct to hoard and protect possessions.[5]

Community

History

The dragon community originated on the usenet newsgroup alt.fan.dragons.[8] The group was created on December 1st, 1993 for fans of dragons. Almost immediately, people began posting to the group saying they were dragons, though it was unclear how seriously these early posters meant it. It is also unclear when the group became predominated by dragons and not just dragon fans, but ExistingPhantom, the creator of the newsgroup, reports that it happened around November of 1994.[9]

Many draconic websites, groups, and forums emerged in the following years, including several notable ones:[9]

  • dragonfire.org was created as a companion website to alt.fan.dragons on August 6th, 1996.
  • draconic.com, a forum, was created on January 11th, 1998.
  • The Draconity FAQ, an article written by Baxil, partly about alt.fan.dragons, was first published on October 11th, 1998.
  • An Alfandria (alt.fan.dragons) LiveJournal was created August 3d, 2001.

AFD continued to host a mix of roleplayers and those who considered themselves dragons, including the following the in an FAQ on dragonfire.org:

Some individuals consider that it is role-playing, and others don't. There are many on the group who are dragons in mind, spirit or body. A.f.d is not considered a typical role-playing game or newsgroup. Individuals place a lot of their emotions and feelings into their post.[10]

Some sites for dragons still run today and there are dedicated message boards for dragons. Otherwise, much of the dragon community has assimilated into the otherkin community.[1] Some dragons lament this change, seeing it as a loss.[5][7]

Terminology

The terms 'draconic' and 'draconity' had become the common terms to refer to the people in this community and their experiences by 1995.[9] Draconity was considered a measure of "how much a person relates to dragons", and a person was considered a dragon if they had any meaningful level of it.[3][11] Therefore, these were considered umbrella terms for dragonkin, dragon therians and theriomythics, dragonhearted people, dragon furries, and anyone else who experienced an affinity for dragons who chose to identify this way. For many people, draconic was their only label. The word 'dracanthrope' has also been used by some people, by analogy to 'lycanthrope' and 'therianthrope'.[11]

Members of alt.fan.dragons often referred to humans as 'Georges' or 'greggils'. Rather than greymuzzles, elder members of the dragon community were called 'old fruits'.[12]

References

External links