Hardly anyone reads Ranma as a transmasc character though, mostly because he was born and raised male and his female form is rather new. Instead, he’s typically seen as the transfem egg fantasy of “oh no someone made me become a girl! Oh well, there’s nothing I can do.” In the actual text of the anime/manga, he is pretty adamant that he’s a guy, but mostly seems to want to get rid of his female form because it’s inconvenient (he gets comfortable being seen as a woman pretty quickly). IMO it’s got some genderqueer/gnc flavor, but doesn’t map very well onto more binary trans experiences.
Transfems have a tendency to do that (myself included). There’s a few other shows I can think of where a character is somehow reincarnated into a girls body and are effectively made into transmasc characters, but its hard not to be jealous of them anyways despite their struggles with dysphoria that result from the sudden change. Granted, these are permanent reincarnations, not a temporary change, so temporary form changes map even worse to real life.
I’m curious about the authors who write these stories. Are they transfem eggs who want to effectively be forced femmed but don’t want to admit it (hence the characters expressing negative emotions towards the changes), are they actually transmasc and just expressing their feelings via a character who was forcibly feminized? Do they just find gender bending to be an interesting topic philosophically. Ranma 1/2’s author seems to be a cis female. Tanya and Wild Last Boss are written under a pseudonyms and I think their authors are pretty much unknown.
You should check out Total Fantasy Knockout. The author has stated multiple times that the exact nature of the unavoidable queerness of the story is left for the audience to decide and that they just want to cause people to realize things about themselves, lol.
I do get kind of frustrated when transfems claim for their “team” characters whose experiences and stated feelings map really well onto transmasc experiences, but I understand the impulse and at some point we all just need to take what we can get. (For the record, Ranma does not fall into that camp for me because he very much does not seem to have dysphoria, lol)
Hardly anyone reads Ranma as a transmasc character though, mostly because he was born and raised male and his female form is rather new. Instead, he’s typically seen as the transfem egg fantasy of “oh no someone made me become a girl! Oh well, there’s nothing I can do.” In the actual text of the anime/manga, he is pretty adamant that he’s a guy, but mostly seems to want to get rid of his female form because it’s inconvenient (he gets comfortable being seen as a woman pretty quickly). IMO it’s got some genderqueer/gnc flavor, but doesn’t map very well onto more binary trans experiences.
Transfems have a tendency to do that (myself included). There’s a few other shows I can think of where a character is somehow reincarnated into a girls body and are effectively made into transmasc characters, but its hard not to be jealous of them anyways despite their struggles with dysphoria that result from the sudden change. Granted, these are permanent reincarnations, not a temporary change, so temporary form changes map even worse to real life.
I’m curious about the authors who write these stories. Are they transfem eggs who want to effectively be forced femmed but don’t want to admit it (hence the characters expressing negative emotions towards the changes), are they actually transmasc and just expressing their feelings via a character who was forcibly feminized? Do they just find gender bending to be an interesting topic philosophically. Ranma 1/2’s author seems to be a cis female. Tanya and Wild Last Boss are written under a pseudonyms and I think their authors are pretty much unknown.
You should check out Total Fantasy Knockout. The author has stated multiple times that the exact nature of the unavoidable queerness of the story is left for the audience to decide and that they just want to cause people to realize things about themselves, lol.
I do get kind of frustrated when transfems claim for their “team” characters whose experiences and stated feelings map really well onto transmasc experiences, but I understand the impulse and at some point we all just need to take what we can get. (For the record, Ranma does not fall into that camp for me because he very much does not seem to have dysphoria, lol)