Shapeshifting
Shapeshifting
Shapeshifting
Greco-Roman …
Vertumnus, in the form of an old woman, wooing
Pomona, by Gerbrand van den Eeckhout.
Celtic mythology …
Norse …
In the Lokasenna, Odin and Loki taunt
each other with having taken the form of
females and nursing offspring to which
they had given birth. A 13th-century Edda
relates Loki taking the form of a mare to
bear Odin's steed Sleipnir which was the
fastest horse ever to exist, and also the
form of a she-wolf to bear Fenrir.[8]
Armenian …
Indian …
Tatar …
Japanese …
Kuzunoha the fox woman, casting a fox shadow
Korean …
Korean mythology also contains a fox with
the ability to shapeshift. Unlike its Chinese
and Japanese counterparts, the kumiho is
always malevolent. Usually its form is of a
beautiful young woman; one tale recounts
a man, a would-be seducer, revealed as a
kumiho.[16] The kumiho has nine tails and
as she desires to be a full human, she uses
her beauty to seduce men and eat their
hearts (or in some cases livers where the
belief is that 100 livers would turn her into
a real human).
Somali …
In Somali mythology Qori ismaris ("One
who rubs himself with a stick") was a man
who could transform himself into a
"Hyena-man" by rubbing himself with a
magic stick at nightfall and by repeating
this process could return to his human
state before dawn.
Southern Africa …
Folktales …
Themes
Shapeshifting may be used as a plot
device, such as when Puss in Boots in the
fairy tales tricks the ogre into becoming a
mouse to be eaten. Shapeshifting may
also include symbolic significance, like the
Beast's transformation in Beauty and the
Beast indicates Belle's ability to accept
him despite his appearance.[25]
This section possibly contains original research.
Learn more
Punitive changes …
Transformation chase …
In many fairy tales and ballads, as in Child
Ballad #44, The Twa Magicians or Farmer
Weathersky, a magical chase occurs where
the pursued endlessly takes on forms in an
effort to shake off the pursuer, and the
pursuer answers with shapeshifting, as, a
dove is answered with a hawk, and a hare
with a greyhound. The pursued may finally
succeed in escape or the pursuer in
capturing.
Powers …
Bildungsroman …
Needed items …
Inner conflict …
The power to externally transform can
symbolize an internal savagery; a central
theme in many strands of werewolf
mythology,[37] and the inversion of the
"liberation" theme, as in Dr Jekyll's
transformation into Mr. Hyde.
Usurpation …
Sister Alenushka Weeping about Brother Ivanushka
by Viktor Vasnetsov, Russian variant of Brother and
Sister: Alenushka laments her brother's
transformation into a goat.
Monstrous bride/bridegroom …
Modern
Fiction …
Popular culture …
See also
Glamour
Marvel Comics' Skrull extraterrestrial
beings (1962–present)
Resizing (fiction)
Skin-walker
Soul eater (folklore)
The Thing (1982 film)
Notes
Citations …
Bibliography …
Further reading
Hall, Jamie (2003). Half Human, Half
Animal: Tales of Werewolves and Related
Creatures. AuthorHouse. ISBN 1-4107-
5809-5.
Wood, Felicity. "The Shape-Shifter on the
Borderlands: A Comparative Study of the
Trickster Figure in African Orality and in
Oral Narratives Concerning one South
African Trickster, Khotso Sethuntsa."
English in Africa (2010): 71-90.
Zaytoun, Kelli D. "“Now Let Us Shift” the
Subject: Tracing the Path and
Posthumanist Implications of La
Naguala/The Shapeshifter in the Works
of Gloria Anzaldúa." MELUS: Multi-Ethnic
Literature of the United States 40.4
(2015): 69–88.
External links
Real Shapeshifters Website Dedicated
to the study of shapeshifting
phenomena (realshapeshifters.com)
Shapeshifters in Love – A series of
articles about shapeshifting characters
in romance and speculative fiction.
Retrieved from
"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?
title=Shapeshifting&oldid=989585338"