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I’m Kat! Professional Storyteller & Neurodivergent Creative

But what if it was queer…? 🤔 🏳️‍🌈


KAT VANCIL

THE STORYTELLER'S SAGA

QUEST 103

Fellow fairytale lover Liz Gotauco is quoted as saying, Looking for gay characters in fairytales can feel like a fruitless endeavor.

And she’s not wrong. Though the sexuality of the authors of many fairytales and classics is constantly debated, what is plain to see is that fairytales and classics have a serious diversity problem.

So how do we fix it, Reader?

By adapting the stories to make them more queer inclusive. Because the world might not need another Cinderella retelling half as badly as it needs a remixed Little Mermaid where the mer-prince and octo-warlock end up in an enemies-to-lovers situation.

Unless, of course, it’s the retelling where Billy Porter plays the “Fabulous Godmother.” Because the world always needs more of that.

So here are 3 ways to adapt an old story to include your queer character(s) into the cast:

1) Lead Character Gender-swap

Maybe your Juliet becomes a Julien or your Belle becomes a Bel. Or in the case of L.C. Rosen’s Emmett, your Emma becomes an Emmett.

It might seem like a simple change, swapping the gender of the lead character for something new. But that “simple thing” can change the whole dynamics of the story.

And it can lead to some interesting reworks. Like the ones I’m encountering while working on my upcoming novel Seventh Swan, a cozy “boys who own a bakery” Fantasy meets gender-swapped retelling of The Wild Swans/The Six Swans.

But a change like this can also make a huge impact. And the more stories that exist with queer persons front and center, the more queer readers across the world will have the opportunity to see people like them represented in stories.

2) But Make it Queer

Does recasting a character from the original story as queer heighten the emotional impact of the story? Does something that might have been originally mundane become almost heartbreakingly devastating with a simple change of gender or preference?

Not always, but it definitely can.

For example, in the manga/anime Requiem of the Rose King by Aya Kanno she blends Shakespeare’s Henry VI, Part 3, and Richard III into one queer narrative to tell the story of an intersex Richard III.

Kanno’s manga/anime illustrates the heart-wrenchingly honest portrayal of a queer person in a historical setting. And shows how they deal with rejection from their family and society, their pursuit of love and acceptance, and the actions they must take to ensure their own survival.

There’s also Anna-Marie McLemore’s retelling of The Great Gatsby Self-Made Boys, in which McLemore transforms the characters of Nick and Jay into two trans boys. The title alone is a nod to the character’s sense of self.

And though it might seem a simple toss-away scene in the grand scheme of the story as a whole, the speakeasy section shouldn’t be dismissed.

Because historically, speakeasies were not just a place to procure liquor during Prohibition, but were also a haven for the queer community during President Warren G. Harding’s “Return to Normalcy” movement. A place where everyone could be just “a little more themselves.”

Details like this are what make a story set a hundred years ago feel just as relevant as they would be today. Need another example? My author friend, Mathew Hubbard’s Contemporary Young Adult novel The Rebel’s Guide to Pride about queer speakeasies in a small town that’s banned Pride, just released this summer.

3) We’re Living in a Queer-Normative World

Most fairytales and classics come from our world and are thus Heteronormative. But what if they weren’t?

When you remake an old story, you can set it in a world where the sexuality of the characters is neither an issue nor taboo. Basically, where binary pairs aren’t the automatic given.

Essentially, you could wave your magic story wand 🪄 and choose to make your entire supporting cast queer if you wanted, or a large majority of them anyway. Like comic creator Anne Luise Pätzke does in her series Bound: The Contract.

Looking for another queer-normative example? Then check out Netflix’s Dragon Prince which has several queer characters, and characters that have same-sex parents.


I hope these examples give you plenty of ideas for adapting your next fairytale or classic story.

Well, until next time, Reader, this is your friendly neighborhood storytelling Kat wishing you a wonderfully creative week.

Your cohort in storytelling,

Kat Vancil

🐱

PS 👉 What’s your favorite adapted tale? Hit reply and let me know.

Liz Gotauco is the host of F*cked Up Fairytales with Liz and her book F*cked Up Fairy Tales: Sinful Cinderellas, Prince Alarmings, and Other Timeless Classics is now available for preorder, so go check it out!

Though not specifically queer, Gender Swapped Fairy Tales by Karrie Fransman & Jonathan Flackett swaps the genders of characters in classic fairytales on top of being lushly illustrated.

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I’m Kat! Professional Storyteller & Neurodivergent Creative

Here to help you vanquish those story construction obstacles, slay that imposter syndrome clawing at the back of your brain & stomp boredom flat with heart-pounding Boys Love fiction. Join the Saga and choose your inbox obsession, whether it’s helpful advice to get your writing unstuck or my twice monthly newsletter featuring book recommendations & chapters of my ongoing magikal Dark Academia series ExSpelled to devour during your coffee break.

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