Here’s a New York Times review of a TV series, A Discovery of Witches, produced in the United Kingdom depicting a world clandestinely inhabited by vampires, witches and demons. These three populations have been observing a centuries long pact of mutual respect, shared powers, and keeping off the radar of hoomanity — the truce being endangered by a trans-species love affair between undead hunk Matthew Clairmont and the bewitching Diana Bishop. The series airs on Sundance Now and Shudder. Here’s an excerpt:
“Based on the novels in Deborah Harkness’s All Souls trilogy, the series imagines a triumvirate of nonhuman species — vampires, witches and demons — among whom peace is maintained by a centuries-old power-sharing arrangement. That détente is threatened when the historian Diana Bishop (Teresa Palmer), a daughter of witches who seems to have no significant powers herself, finds in the Bodleian Library a dusty volume that the supernatural elite has been seeking for, well, centuries. Matthew, who’s not just a fatally handsome 1,500-year-old French nobleman but an Oxford biochemist, is researching why magical creatures seem to be losing their powers.”
Read the review: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/16/arts/television/a-discovery-of-witches-review.html.
Historically, the terms used have been “zoophilia” and/or “beastiality”
We should be more politically correct though. “Living impaired” instead of “undead”