Zoophilia
From The Art and Popular Culture Encyclopedia
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*One ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' [[woodblock print]] from [[Kunisada|Utagawa Kunisada]]'s series, "[[Eight Canine Heroes of the House of Satomi]]", 1837 [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:%E6%97%A5%E6%9C%AC%E6%98%A5%E5%AE%AB%E5%86%8C%E9%A1%B5%E3%80%8A%E5%A5%B3%E4%BA%BA%E5%92%8C%E7%8B%97%E3%80%8B.jpg] | *One ''[[ukiyo-e]]'' [[woodblock print]] from [[Kunisada|Utagawa Kunisada]]'s series, "[[Eight Canine Heroes of the House of Satomi]]", 1837 [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:%E6%97%A5%E6%9C%AC%E6%98%A5%E5%AE%AB%E5%86%8C%E9%A1%B5%E3%80%8A%E5%A5%B3%E4%BA%BA%E5%92%8C%E7%8B%97%E3%80%8B.jpg] | ||
*[[19th century preoccupation with human animal contact]] | *[[19th century preoccupation with human animal contact]] | ||
+ | *[[User:Jahsonic/dark fin de siècle fascination with human female/ape contact]] | ||
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Zoophilia, from the Greek ζωον (zôon, "animal") and φιλία (philia, "friendship" or "love"), is a paraphilia, defined as an affinity or sexual attraction by a human to an animal. Such individuals are called zoophiles. The more recent terms zoosexual and zoosexuality describe the full spectrum of human/animal orientation. A separate term, bestiality (more common in mainstream usage and frequently but incorrectly seen as a synonym; often misspelled as "beastiality"), refers to human/animal sexual activity. To avoid confusion about the meaning of zoophilia — which may refer to the affinity/attraction, paraphilia, or sexual activity — this article uses zoophilia for the former, and zoosexual activity for the sexual act. The two terms are independent: not all sexual acts with animals are performed by zoophiles; and not all zoophiles perform zoosexual acts.
Examples in art
- One ukiyo-e woodblock print from Utagawa Kunisada's series, "Eight Canine Heroes of the House of Satomi", 1837 [1]
- 19th century preoccupation with human animal contact
- User:Jahsonic/dark fin de siècle fascination with human female/ape contact