Sacrifice and Survival in Systems of Oppression
Sacrifice is framed not as an act of devotion but as a demand embedded within oppressive systems—colonial violence, mercantile transaction, and tribal ritual—each demanding tribute from the oppressed to legitimize power. Romana’s binding and proposed sacrifice to Kroll exemplify how marginalized figures become pawns in wider struggles, their suffering co-opted as both spectacle and justification for escalation. The Swampies’ chanting and the colonizers’ orbital strike ritualize violence as inevitability, revealing how both sides project divine or strategic necessity onto human suffering. Mensch’s covert survival within the colonial system and the Doctor’s self-sacrifice to protect others highlight resilience as both survival strategy and moral act. This theme reframes sacrifice from a voluntary offering to a coerced demand, questioning who is truly expendable in the pursuit of power.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The Swampies bind Romana to a rock in preparation for sacrifice, leaving her vulnerable to Rohm-Dutt’s interrogation. The gun-runner questions her with cold indifference, probing for information about the human …
Skart seizes the moment of covenant signing between Ranquin and Rohm-Dutt to propose a human sacrifice to Kroll before the coming battle. The Swampie leader Ranquin, emboldened by the newly …
As night falls the Swampies form a frenzied circle around Romana dragged toward the arch of Kroll’s face-shields. Ranquin declares the temple ready and the offering prepared while the crowd …
The Doctor learns the Swampies are preparing a blood sacrifice to their deity Kroll and realizes Romana is the intended victim. Despite Thawn’s threats and urgent plans for a violent …