Subject: This was a difficult chapter to write, too!
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Posted on: 2024-04-02 01:15:39 UTC

The reason I went there was because the original worldbuilding claimed to be trans-inclusive, but was still incredibly, deeply gender essentialist. In the original worldbuilding, witches store magic in their hair. Wizards and Wixes (fanon-popular term for nonbinary magic-users, first started in 2013) literally cannot store magic in their hair according to the og worldbuilder. They've doubled down on that recently. I think they justify it by suggesting that if you change your gender, magic automatically recognises it and you suddenly get magic hair, or your magic migrates into a ring or a cuff? But to me, honestly, it feels like too many extra steps when the more inclusive idea that still fits within the broad strokes of the setting is that anyone can put magic anywhere they like, and you're only able to wield the magic in your hair if it's past your shoulders.

Also, the ways in which the og worldbuilder approached nonbinary mages felt like they were just creating a third gender with third gender roles (which is, in a nutshell, to be in the exact middle between Witch and Wizard rather than anything that would take them outside binary gender). They also said, in a comment on their lexicon, that "Mother Magic just knows" whether or not you're trans, which... if Mother Magic is all-seeing, all-knowing, and all-powerful, then why would She not bother to make your bits match your gender before you were born? Why would She choose to make someone uncomfortable in their own skin? The worldbuilder also refuses to engage with the implications of the gender essentialist structure of "only witches can keep magic in their hair" which is like... so then what happens if an AFAB mage can't store magic in their hair? Is that how they know early on that they're not a witch? But what if they did want magic hair because they don't like rings or cuff bracelets? What would their family say?

And, ofc, the worldbuilder says that trans mages would just take a permanent gender-change potion (which, I suppose, would make their hair magic, or take the magic out of their hair depending on the destination) which speaks to this overall push to be nice-smiling-people-at-the-church-ice-cream-social normal and to conform to prescribed gender roles and etiquette based on the ability of one's body to store magic. It's respectability politics gone wild. It's "oh, it's okay to be LGBTQIA because magic exists to remove the barriers between your queerness and being normal." (As Luna is going to say in a couple chapters, Merlin forbid a girl swap out her broomstick and Bludgers for a nice pair of cat ears or something!)

Anyway, all of this had to be condensed into plotlines and dialogue, so it was a struggle to get right to the point of what I wanted to say without pontificating on how restrictive/gender essentialist this piece of worldbuilding was. I hope it did come out but not like... too heavy-handed? I'm glad you enjoyed the shoutout to the Frog Choir and Harry's burning urge to Throw Hands for his friends :D Thanks for reading!

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