Universally relatable, morally complex, rich in dramatic tension. Weaknesses: Often oversimplified into hero/victim binaries; ignores collective power (unions, movements, mutual aid).
Take : Winston Smith’s powerlessness is absolute. The Party doesn’t just control his actions; it invades his thoughts. The horror is not that he loses—it’s that he learns to love his own erasure. Conversely, Toni Morrison’s Beloved shows powerlessness transformed: Sethe’s past enslavement robs her of agency, yet her most violent act (killing her child) is a horrifying reclamation of power over her daughter’s future. power and powerless
Parable of the Sower (Octavia Butler), Disgrace (J.M. Coetzee), or the film Parasite (Bong Joon-ho). ignores collective power (unions