Modern woman wakes to find herself in the body of a Victorian woman
SWAP MAGIC 3.6 SERIES
Magic toilet / third in Jiggy McCue series Nicholas (young boy) and Leonardo (his pet cat) Inhale laughing gas at a dentist's office Magic wind (originally wish from a falling star) Lovecraft's 1937 short story The Thing on the Doorstep
Warden powers to swap minds of two sleeping participants ĭu bist ich und ich bin du (転校生!おれがあいつであいつがおれで)Ĭormac, Mika, Aiden, Stanton, Dragon, CraneĪrtificial intelligence transfers to different bodies downloads of human minds into artificial carriers and cyborg bodiesĮmerson Watts (tomboy) and Nikki Howard (teenage supermodel)Ĭharacters swap souls after a car accidentĬaptain Underpants and the Big, Bad Battle of the Bionic Booger Boy Parts 1 and 2 It also excludes age transformations that are sometimes reviewed or promoted as body swaps, as in the movies Big and 17 Again identity/role swaps, typically between twins, clones, look-alikes, or doppelgängers and characters with multiple personalities. This list features exchanges between two beings, and thus excludes similar phenomena of body hopping, spirit possession, transmigration, and avatars, unless the target being's mind is conversely placed in the source's body. In 2013, Disney Channel held a Freaky Freakend with seven shows that featured body-swapping episodes. Novels such as Vice Versa (1882) and Freaky Friday (1972) have inspired numerous film adaptations and retellings, as well as television series and episodes, many with titles derived from "Freaky Friday". Body swaps, first popularized in the personal identity chapter of John Locke's Essay Concerning Human Understanding, have been a common storytelling device in fiction media.