Performative Authority and the Spectacle of Power
Power is wielded not through competence or care but through theatrical demonstrations designed to intimidate, assert control, and mask insecurity. Skagra’s arrogant declarations, his superficial composure in Renaissance attire, and his ritualized cruelty—such as threatening to erase Paris—reveal authority as a performance to project invincibility. His arc collapses into desperate commands when the spectacle fails, stripping away the veneer of control. The Krargs serve as physical extensions of this performative authority: silent, motionless, and responsive only to commands, embodying how true autonomy dissolves into spectacle under domination. Even the Doctor engages in performative authority—not through tyranny, but through calculated wit and misdirection—to protect allies and deflect suspicion, inverting Scarlioni’s model to use authority as a shield rather than a weapon.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
Skagra unveils his plan to use stolen prisoners as a living Think Tank to distribute mind control across key population centers. He asserts his power under the guarantee of his …
The Doctor returns to the TARDIS console room wearing his improvised helmet, seeking answers from his ship about the encroaching threat outside. Using the scanner, he discovers Skagra and his …
Time is running out as Skagra prepares to eliminate the Doctor, relying on his imprisoned Think Tank to enforce his will. Romana and Clare improvise an electrical counterattack while the …
Skagra arrives in the brig he once used to imprison the Doctor and his companions, only for the sentient ship to reject him entirely. Once hailed as his creator and …
While Professor Chronotis serves tea to maintain the facade of normalcy, the Doctor and Romana double down on their temporal misdirection by reading Dickens aloud to deflect suspicion. The Constable’s …