I write a lot of always-a-girl genderswap. Most people don’t like it, fine, but some responses to it are starting to really annoy me, especially the “it’s all X” or “they only write it because Y.” So here are my actual reasons for doing it - which may not be others genderswappers’ reasons, but should at least give a better idea of “but whyyyy” than
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As for the criticism, I don't get how genderswap changes the character - it may change how they were brought up, or how they or society perceives them, but it always appeared to me that the point of genderswap is still having the same character. In that, Lucy Skywalker almost seemed like a kind of "social experiment" to me, like you took Luke as a character, changed one aspect of him and watched the reactions of the other characters, as well as the creators of the movies. (Speaking of which, from the paperdolls you once posted I gather that you have some rough plans to continue the Lucyverse all the way through Return of the Jedi, and I'm burning to know how it continues, especially with the giant twist you finished with ( ... )
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And yes, exactly - I think it says more about the audience than the trope that the change of gender seems so much more radically different than 'they have wings' or 'but now they're doctors in New York' or all the kinds of things people regularly do. And yes, the intellectual experiment really is what Lucy was about - all genderswap, really, but Lucy in particular.
Yes, I do have further plans! In fact, the main plot I came up with actually started at the end of ESB, and these two were mostly just setting it up - basically establishing what's the same and what's different before things sharply swerve off. I kind of lost interest towards the end of the Imperial Menace - mostly because lj was dying and I didn't have anyone to talk to (and to be fair, also because I was finishing my bachelor's ( ... )
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