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  1. Shapeshifting: A character can transform their own body as a special power or ability. Obviously enough, they are called shapeshifters, and often ply their powers for fun and profit (whether good or evil), or simply to trick or play practical jokes on normal folks.

    • ImageLinks

      A page for describing ImageLinks: Shapeshifting. Encanto:...

    • VideoExamples

      Shapeshifting » Video Examples. Main ... Nimona is capable...

    • Laconic

      A page for describing Laconic: Shapeshifting. The ability to...

    • Nonsenseoleum

      In The 5000 Fingers of Dr. T, Bart Collins creates a...

  2. Shapeshifting or other changes into and out of determinate states is still liminal if the transition keeps happening, or if the time in the other state confers a permanent change in the character. They are also notorious for Loophole Abuse and No Man of Woman Born, particularly for the Impossible Task. If a task can be performed by neither one ...

  3. I was literally going to just say this. The Mery Thompson series and Alpha and Omega are both great series that can be read alone or together. Although reading them togather is so much better. The writing is great, amd if you listen on Audible, they did a really good job with the casting.

  4. May 25, 2012 · This book aims to unravel the shapeshifting trope. Rather than pursue a case-based study, the works are grouped around specific themes--adolescence, gender, sexuality, race, disability,...

  5. To elaborate, what I mean is fiction that has the trope of shapeshifting, with a character (s) being able to transform their appearance, and using that to explicitly play with gender and gender presentation.

  6. Shapeshifting Failure: Someone loses some of their shapeshifting ability or cannot keep a form. Slow Transformation : Shapeshifting that is time-consuming and gradual. Stumbling in the New Form : When a character transforms and has trouble moving around properly in the new body.

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  8. Becoming a mother shifts a woman’s identity, and that’s why Ross’s choice of title for the collection, Shapeshifting, is apt and on point. A mother’s identity is never the same after having children.