Survival Against Systemic Oppression
The companions' struggle against the Atlantean regime exposes the dehumanizing machinery of an authoritarian cult that enforces conformity through ritual, labor, and transformation. Polly’s impending 'fish operation,' Ben and Jamie’s coerced labor in the mines, and the Doctor’s resistance to sacrificial ceremonies all illustrate how institutional power strips individuals of agency. The theme underscores the cruelty of systems that prioritize ideological purity over human dignity, with the Doctor and his companions repeatedly forced into compliance or defiance. Polly’s transformation and the fish-people farmers serve as visceral reminders of the regime’s endgame: to erase personal identity in favor of a homogenized collective.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The Doctor and companions awaken disoriented in an unfamiliar chamber, their confusion deepening as Polly deduces they’ve landed in 1970. The Doctor’s academic musings about troglodytes and cave dwellers contrast …
The Doctor’s companions—Polly, Ben, and Jamie—are forcibly dragged into the cavernous Temple of Amdo, a sacred space dominated by the towering idol of the fish-goddess. The atmosphere is thick with …
The companions’ fragile unity collapses as Jamie urges immediate escape, but Ben clings to the Doctor’s promised return—until Polly’s fear is realized when Atlantean guards forcibly drag the Doctor into …
In the sterile, clinical setting of an operating theatre, Damon separates Polly from Ben and Jamie, assigning the men to forced labor in the mines while sparing Polly for a …
In the sterile operating theatre, Damon separates Ben and Jamie for forced labor in the mines while sparing Polly, who is shown the Atlanteans' underwater farming operation through a window. …