Body hopping

Body hopping is the fictional ability and desire to possess people in quick succession. A body hopper can transfer quickly from one physical body to another physical body with little or no resistance and few conditions on moving on to a new body, and usually without getting stuck in said body for a long period of time. Although this idea is very unlikely, scientific studies suggest that this process would result in significant trauma.[1]

Origin in fiction

This fictional occurrence can be seen in some media. This popular scheme has been portrayed in a multitude of fantasy films and novels. One of the earliest known examples of body swapping in literature is seen in the 1882 book Vice Versa by Thomas Antsey Guthrie, who wrote under the pseudonym F. Antsey in the 19th century.[1]

Types

  • Same-sex or same body type: people of the same biological sex and typically the same build swap bodies. (e.g., The Change-Up – both white males above the age of 30)
  • Different sex: people of different biological sexes that in turn swap bodies. (e.g., It's a Boy Girl Thing – two teenagers, one male and one female have to live in each other's bodies for a short period of time)
  • Child-to-adult/adult-to-child: a child transforms into an adult body, vice versa. (e.g., Big – 12-year-old boy turns into 30 year old man and must live an adult life with a real life job)
  • Human to animal: humans turn into animal form. (e.g., Sabrina the Teenage Witch – their cat Salem was really once a boy who was cursed into living the rest of his life as a cat)

Examples

See also

References

  1. Burnett, Dean (2014-04-02). "Body swapping: the science behind the switch | Dean Burnett". the Guardian. Retrieved 2018-05-09.
  2. "Nights And Weekends - Politics as Horror, Horror as Art: Part 5". nightsandweekends.com.
  3. ""Time is on my side....yes, it is." - from Fallen". VideoSift.
  4. "eccentric-cinema.com". Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  5. "10 DAYS OF 13 REDUX: JASON GOES TO HELL". 15 February 2009. Archived from the original on 15 February 2009. Retrieved 2 March 2017.
  6. "Moria - the science fiction, horror and fantasy movie review site - First Power, the". Archived from the original on 2008-10-17.
  7. Bone Dance, Isfdb.org



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