Power as Tyranny and Leverage
Power is depicted through the predatory lens of El Akir, who buys and sells human lives as trophies, and the calculated ploys of merchant-class figures like Luigi Ferrigo, who prey on disarray for profit. Richard’s strategic leverage—exemplified by his knighting of Ian or the proposal of Joanna’s marriage—reveals a paradox: power is both a means to end violence and a tool that perpetuates it. Those without power (Barbara, Vicki, Thatcher) endure its consequences, illuminating how authoritarianism and commercial exploitation thrive in collapse.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
Outside Saladin’s throne room, El Akir attempts to coerce Sheyrah into revealing Barbara’s location, but she resists his threats, exposing his desperation and her loyalty. His interrogation stalls when Luigi …
Outside Saladin’s throne room, El Akir’s failed attempt to coerce Sheyrah into revealing Barbara’s location is interrupted by Luigi Ferrigo’s arrival. Luigi, sensing an opportunity, offers a transaction: he will …
In the dim, tense confines of the stables, Barbara—already disoriented from Luigi’s deception—is abruptly silenced by El Akir, who materializes to claim her. His hand clamps over her mouth, cutting …
In Richard’s throne room, the King dictates a peace treaty proposal to Saladin, offering his sister Joanna’s hand in marriage to Saphadin as a diplomatic gambit. The Doctor, Ian, and …
El Akir, a vengeful warlord, orders Barbara to be brought before him as a captive, reinforcing his pattern of collecting and imprisoning women. The guards mockingly refer to her as …