Defending Identity Against Institutional Erasure
This theme examines how institutional power—feudal, temporal, or political—seeks to erase or control individual identity through humiliation, false narratives, or violence. Institutions enforce conformity, using ritual and spectacle to reduce personal agency to a singular, enforced identity. Resistance emerges through acts like maternal protectiveness or direct intervention, exposing the fragility of identity under systemic coercion. The tension lies not in cosmic threats but in earthly structures that treat identity as provisional, shaped by those in power rather than the individual.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The Doctor, Tegan, and Turlough arrive in 13th-century England to find King John presiding over a tournament that has turned into a spectacle of arbitrary violence. John’s demand for trials …
Isabella moves to comfort her shamed son Hugh in the Great Hall, but his speech is bitter and closed off, the physical wound of his dishonor overwhelming his mother’s tenderness. …
King John’s demand for Ranulf’s fealty escalates into overt hostage-taking when Sir Gilles seizes Isabella as collateral, exposing the crown’s willingness to brutalize families to enforce compliance. Isabella absorbs Ranulf’s …
Hugh subjects Turlough to brutal interrogation in the dungeon, suspending him over an iron maiden to force answers about the Doctor and his affiliation. His violence escalates until Isabella’s arrival …
In the torchlit guest chamber Ranulf storms in accusing an unseen force of destroying King John’s mind only to discover the Doctor and Tegan, newcomers who share his suspicion. The …
Ranulf bursts into the guest chamber in a frenzy, sword drawn, convinced King John has been bewitched. He accuses the monarch of seizing his wealth and abducting his lady, his …