The Violence of Institutions and the Exploitation of Symbols
Institutions—be they the Graff’s regime, the Conglomerate survey, or even the Ribos’ sacred rituals—are shown to be inherently violent structures that reduce individuals and cultures to mere instruments of power. Graff Vynda-K’s regime enforces order through public displays of brutality, such as the slap meted out to the Doctor, demonstrating how authority is maintained through spectacle rather than justice. The jethrik stones, sacred to Ribos, are treated as commodities to be hoarded or stolen, mirroring the Conglomerate’s colonial exploitation of Ribos’ mineral wealth. Even the Resonance scan represents an institutional act of theft, erasing prior knowledge to serve present ambitions. The narrative critiques how symbols—crowns, stones, rituals—are stripped of meaning and wielded as tools of domination, a theme that resonates with Doctor Who’s broader skepticism of absolutist power structures.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The Doctor, Romana, and Garron are forcibly detained by the Graff’s guards who mistake them for interlopers. Garron attempts to defuse the situation through false humility, but the Graff’s violent …
The Relic Room’s breach shocks the Captain, who reports only the gold’s theft. The Graff’s fury escalates when he spots the empty space where the jethrik—a sacred artifact tied to …
Sholakh brings the core rod before the Doctor, expecting to demonstrate his superior knowledge, but the Doctor immediately undermines him by turning a fixed asset into a display of intellectual …
The Seeker invokes an ancestral ritual in the Relic Room, using bones and incantations to locate the thief who stole the jethrik and holds the Key to Time fragment. She …
The Seeker reveals the target’s escape into the lethal Catacombs, shattering the Captain’s confidence and the Graff’s patience. The Captain refuses to pursue Unstoffe further, citing the deadly legends of …