A mystery. With body swapping. In some kind of steampunk Bridgerton setting. I noped out on page one.
There's science fiction, which has robots and aliens and thought experiments, and extrapolates based on plausible scenarios.
And then there's this other genre, full of bodyswapping and psionics, that hits me more like religious tracts for some nutty new age multilevel marketing scheme right out of the '70s, or some utopian human potential cult that's mostly about dominance and submission. You are not your body! You create reality with your words! You must be vigilant about people spying on your inner monologue and even taking it over! It's not based on science, so it's not really science fiction per se, but it slides in through the "people used to think this was science" loophole.
The history of these various belief systems is a fascinating subject for study. Yoga is awesome. Folklore is nifty.
I can't say the same for art from true believers, earnestly doing their best to convince me that thinking of bodies as disposable vehicles for our marvelous minds is a desirable worldview. No it's not. Your authentic self IS your DNA. You may not invade other peoples' bodies, and they're not going to possess yours. You were not packaged with a series of disposable personality cartridges.
I suppose you could consider this to be horror fiction for people who believe strongly in bodily autonomy; kind of along the lines of Exorcist and Rosemary's Baby. You can't have an autonomous body if different consciousnesses may invade it at will. Willy nilly, in some works of fiction.
It hits me the same way as all the other simplistic religious propaganda in the world though; something decorating the fliers that grimy hippie is trying to hand people on the sidewalk. Or some fanatical asshole with a microphone screaming at people to accept Jesus. Believe what I believe! Then we'll all be safe!
That aversion has put me off acclaimed works like Cloud Atlas, so I'm not interested in seeing what I've grown to think of as a boring cliched rape/control trope reinterpreted yet again. I think the fetish for considering other people to be puppets and their bodies to be discardable outfits is gross, and it reminds me of the narcissistic princess in Return to Oz, and when I see it, I'm passing unless there's some massive art incentivizing me otherwise. I'll blame it on reading way too much Jack L. Chalker in the '70s.