Oppression Creates its Own Resistance
The narrative portrays systemic oppression—not just through direct violence but through bureaucratic cruelty, displacement, and humiliation—as a catalyst for resistance, even when that resistance is reactive or morally compromised. Trask’s sadistic control accelerates Kirsty’s vengeance and Polly’s tactical cunning. Grey’s greed exposes his operational weakness, enabling the Doctor’s disruption. The theme suggests that dehumanization and systemic injustice are engines of rebellion, inevitably fueling behaviors that challenge the status quo, however chaotically.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
Trask discovers Solicitor Grey bound and gagged in a cupboard at the Sea Eagle Inn, revealing the Doctor’s elaborate deception. Grey, humiliated and furious, immediately seizes control of the situation, …
Captain Trask escalates the redcoats' brutality by commanding the Sentry to drag Jamie, Colin, and Ben from their cell with no warning or justification. The prisoners' protests are met with …
In a crowded, oppressive corridor of the Sea Eagle Inn, Ben and the other Jacobite prisoners are herded forward by a sentry, their movements restricted and their dignity stripped. The …
In a tense, claustrophobic rowing boat, the Jacobite prisoners—Ben, Jamie, and Colin—are herded by Trask’s men under the pretense of transport, only for their fleeting hope of escape to be …
Trask orchestrates a cruel psychological game with the Jacobite prisoners, ordering them into a rowing boat only to abruptly reverse the command. The prisoners—already desperate and physically restrained—briefly entertain the …