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āāBut the othersāā A sudden fear seized her. āTheyāre still with me, arenāt they? Theyāre loyal?ā
[ā¦]
āYou really canāt see past yourself, can you?ā Chaghanās lip curled.ā
This quotation shows Rinās character at the beginning of the novel. She sees the other members of the Cike only as a means to an end. She is motivated by a selfish desire for vengeance with little care for their lives, which is what Chaghan notices and mocks her for.
āāI was trying to see what it was like,ā he said. [ā¦] āHow they felt. In the moment it happened. In their very last seconds. I wanted to know how they felt when it ended.āā
This quotation characterizes Kitay, who is established as a foil to Rin early on. He is highly ethical and sympathizes even with Nikanās enemy, the Federation of Mugen, which was responsible for the genocide of his people. While Rin is driven by selfish rage, Kitay is driven by empathy and logic. Here, he is explaining why he burned his arms after witnessing the genocide of the Mugenese.
āI am going to transform the Empire into a republicāa great republic, founded on the individual freedom of men. Instead of Warlords, we would have elected officials. Instead of an Empress, we would have a parliament, overseen by an elected president. I would make it impossible for a single person like Su Daji to bring ruin upon this realm.ā
Vaisra explains his philosophy and the justification for his rebellion. This romanticized and neat picture of rebellion wins over Rin, who hadnāt thought about the fate of the country past her revenge, showing her short-sightedness. Though Vaisra ultimately fails in his quest, Rin learns from his philosophy of civilian empowerment.
āAt first when Rin saw the tops of buildings emerging from the river she thought that they were driftwood, or rocks. Then they got close enough that she could see the curving roofs of drowned pagodas, thatched houses lying under the surface. [ā¦]
Then she saw the bodiesāhalf eaten, bloated and discolored, all with empty sockets because the glutinous eyes had already been nibbled away. They blocked up the river, decomposing at such a rate that the crew had to sweep away the maggots that threatened to climb on board.ā
This quote highlights The Destruction and Inhumanity of War. Rin observes the gruesome, destructive aftermath of Chaghan and Qaraās decision to break the dam that ended the Third Poppy War. They chose to sacrifice the lives of many Nikara to do this. Though it has been some time since that event, the effects linger, showing that the destructive effects of war are long-lasting.
āāAnd your face?ā she asked. āDoes it still hurt?ā
[ā¦]
āIt hurt for a long time. Now I just canāt feel anything.ā
āWhat if I touched you?ā She was struck by the urge to run her thumb over the scars. To caress them.
āI wouldnāt feel that either.āā
Nezhaās scars are reminders of his abduction and torture by the Mugenese, highlighting the destruction and inhumanity of war and its lasting impact. The idea that Nezha wonāt be able to āfeelā Rin touching him because of these scars foreshadows how his desire to prove himself to his family and his fear of his power will keep him from connecting with Rin.
āShe was still looking at Vaisra, who was smiling more widely than sheād ever seen him. He looked pleased. Proud. And somehow, the jolt of satisfaction that gave her felt better than anything sheād smoked in months.ā
This quotation shows how praise can be weaponized to manipulate someone who is in a vulnerable state of mind. It highlights the theme of The Complexities of Power and Oppression. Rin will continue to seek Vaisraās praise, which will make her malleable to his desires even as his tactics grow more ruthless.
āāI want a seat at the table. Chief strategist.ā
āYouāre rather young for that,ā Vaisra said drily.
āNo, Iām not. You made Nezha a general. And Iāve always been smarter than Nezha. You know Iām brilliant. Iām a fucking genius. Put me in charge of operations and you wonāt lose a single battle, I swear.ā Kitayās voice broke at the end. Rin saw his throat bob, saw the veins protruding from his jaw, and knew that he was holding back tears.ā
Though Kitay is young, he is confident about his intellectual abilities and advocates for himself in his new alliance with Vaisra. At the same time, Kitayās vulnerability as he comes close to tears shows that he is indeed very young and has been saddled with weighty responsibilities. Rin, Nezha, and Kitay are all barely out of their teenage years and are faced with difficult choices.
āYou could launch this empire into a glorious new and united age, and you could also destroy us. What you donāt get to do is remain neutral. When you have the power that you do, your life is not your own.ā
Vaisraās advice makes him seem like a good advisor and leader to Rin, who does not know that she could just as well apply this advice to Vaisra himself, who uses her and seeks to destroy her after the war is over. He manipulates her into thinking she is making her own decisions, showing his effective, if exploitative, statesmanship and highlighting the theme of the complexities of power and oppression. At the same time, advice like this eventually empowers Rin to make her own decisions on what to do with her power.
āāWe didnāt come here to lend ships at your will, Vaisra. This is an investigation.ā
āInto what?ā
āWhether the Nikara are ready for civilization. We do not distribute Hesperian aid lightly.āā
This quotation characterizes the Hesperians and shows the complexities of power and oppression. They believe they are better than Nikan and want Vaisra to prove he is worthy of their help, though they donāt tell him the terms of this assessment. They refuse to take accountability for Nikanās present instability, which has largely been caused by their interference.
āItās like Iām frozen in one moment. And no one knows it because everyone else has moved on except me, but to me everything thatās happened since Golyn Niis is a dream, and I know itās not real because Iām still behind the wall. And the worst partāthe worst part is that I donāt know whoās causing the screams. It was easier than only the Federation was evil. Now I canāt figure out whoās right or wrong, and Iām the smart one, Iām always supposed to have the right answer, but I donāt.ā
Kitay discusses how trauma can affect people in the long term, highlighting the destruction and inhumanity of war. Though the Massacre at Golyn Niis is over, it is as vivid in his memory as if he is still living through it. This compounds with the fact that he begins to doubt the moral high ground of his alliance with Vaisra.
āāSince your eyes are smaller, you see within a smaller periphery than we do.ā Petra pointed to the diagrams as she explained. āYour skin has a yellowish tint that indicates malnutrition or an unbalanced diet. Now see your skull shapes. Your brains, which we know to be an indicator of your rational capacity, are by nature smaller.āā
This quotation shows The Impact of Religion on Conflict and Conquest when it is used to justify racism and colonialism. Petra uses pseudoscientific physiognomy to explain, justify, and normalize Hesperian racism.
āShe wished she could discard the Hesperian faith more easily, but so many parts of it made sense. She wanted to believe it. She wanted to see her catastrophic actions as a product of Chaos, an entropic mistake, and to believe that she could repent for them by reinforcing order in the Empire, reversing devastation the way one pieced together a broken teacup.ā
Rin finds herself wanting to latch onto this aspect of Makerism, though she also calls the religion a ājoke.ā She has seen evidence of her gods, but she wants to believe in Makerism because it would allow her to export responsibility for her actions onto an external evil force called āChaos.ā This quotation also shows how religious ideology can sometimes prey on vulnerable people.
āNezha stood beneath the Griffonās mast, arms stretched out to the tower of water as if reaching for something.
He met Rinās gaze, and her heart skipped a beat.
His eyes were shot through with streaks of ocean blueānot the eerie cerulean gleam of Feylenās glare, but a darker cobalt, the color of cold gems.
āYou too?ā she whispered.ā
One of the big plot twists in the novel is the revelation that Nezha is a shaman. Rin has felt isolated in her suffering only to find one of her closest friends has a similar experience. She regrets his involvement with the gods at first, then later envies and insults his refusal of his power.
āThe Sorqan Sira cast her a disdainful smile. āYouāre little children, grasping in a void that you donāt understand for toys that donāt belong to you.ā
Rin wanted to slap the contempt off her face. āThe gods donāt belong to you, either.ā
āBut we know that. And that is the simple difference.āā
The theme of the impact of religion on conflict and conquest gains a new aspect when Rin and Kitay meet the Ketreyids. The Ketreyids believe people have a responsibility not to abuse their connection with the gods and the spiritual realm, lest it have devastating material consequences. This quotation also points out Rinās similarity to the Trifecta, particularly Daji.
āAltan was no hero. That was so clear to her now, so stunningly clear that she felt as if sheād been doused in ice water, submerged and reborn.
She didnāt owe him her guilt.
She didnāt owe him anything.ā
Rin is finally able to free herself from the burden of Altanās legacy when she stops revering him as a hero and recognizes him as a fallible human being. This freedom is an important point in Rinās healing journey to become her own person.
āAll of her secrets, her insecurities, her guilt, and her rage had been laid bare. He saw her cruelest, most brutal desires. He saw parts of her that she didnāt even understand herself. [ā¦]
And she could see him. [ā¦] She saw how scared he was, trapped and isolated in his own mind, watching his world break down around him because of irrationalities that he would not fix.ā
The anchor bond is a spiritual link that makes Rin and Kitay two halves of one unit. Their formal linkage literalizes their narrative role as foils throughout the trilogy, as their opposite but complementary personalities are merged.
āMy mother wishes Iād died that day. I wish Iād died. I wish it had been me. But itās selfish to even wish I were deadābecause if I had died, then Mingzha would have lived, and the Dragon Lord would have cursed him like he cursed me, he would have touched him like he touched me.ā
Nezha tries to explain the nature of his link to the Dragon Lord, who gives Nezha his powers. The Dragon has a manifestation in the material world, unlike the Phoenix. As such, it was able to physically assault Mingzha and Nezha. It is implied here that it also sexually assaults Nezha, which is one of the reasons that Nezha is traumatized by it.
āAt fourteen sheād been lucky enough to study under a tutor who spoke near-standard Sinegardian. And sheād gone to Sinegard young enough that her bad habits were quickly and brutally knocked out of her. Sheād adapted to fit in. Sheād erased her identity to survive.
And it humiliated her that the southerners were now seeking her out, that they had the audacity to wander close to her, because they made her more like them by sheer proximity.ā
Nikara society has many internal hierarchies of privilege, highlighting the complexities of power and oppression. In general, northerners are aristocratic and have pale complexions, whereas southerners are not as wealthy and are darker. The northern accent is considered āstandard,ā which leads to dialectic discrimination as well. To assimilate, Rin tried to rid herself of any sign of her heritage. So, she feels ashamed to be associated with the poor southern refugees in Arlong, where she has a position as a commander and ally of the Dragon Warlord.
āBut the basket was filled with dumplings, each fried to golden perfection and pressed into the pattern of a lotus flower. [ā¦]
The Dragon devours his son.
āThe Empress enjoins you to enjoy a dumpling of the rarest meat,ā said the messenger. āShe expects you might recognize the flavor.āā
This quotation reveals the destruction and inhumanity of war, since Daji has baked Vaisraās son into dumplings as a show of power and intimidation. It also symbolizes how Vaisra, the Dragon Warlord, will metaphorically āeatā his own family and allies to keep power.
āāThe south would rise for you,ā Gurubai insisted. āDo you have any idea how much power you hold? You are the last Speerly. The entire continent knows your name. If you raised your sword, tens of thousands would follow. Theyād fight for you. Youād be their goddess.āā
The southern Warlord Gurubai attempts to get Rin to revolt against Vaisra before Daji invades. Without Vaisraās knowledge, the south has mythologized Rin, who is one of their own. This foreshadows the events of The Burning God, where Rin leads a southern rebellion.
āIt seemed so foolish now to imagine that as long as Vaisra vouched for her, she was safe from those arquebuses. Months ago sheād been lost and afraid, desperate to find an anchor, and that had primed her to trust him. But sheād also seen, over and over again by now, how easily Vaisra manipulated those around him like shadow puppets.ā
Rin finally realizes the full extent of the complexities of power and oppression, especially with regard to Vaisraās complicity in his peopleās oppression, his ruthlessness, and the danger she will be in after the war when he will need the Hesperians more than he will need Rin. Rin witnessed Vaisra betray multiple people before realizing heād betray her, too.
āIf they lost, their rebellion would be vanquished and Nikan would descend into darkness for another several decades at least, rent apart by factional warfare and a lingering Federation presence.
But if they won, the Empire would become a Republic, primed to hurtle into a new and glorious future with Vaisra at the helm and the Hesperians at his side.
And then Rin would have to worry about what happened after.ā
This quotation shows the stakes of the battle in Arlong. Long destabilized by war and foreign invasion, Nikan sits at a crux with its future at stake. One possibility for the country that Rin does not realize at this point is the one that comes true: The millions of disenfranchised people in the south can rise up against their oppressors, Empire and Republic alike.
āShe hadnāt seen the city outside the infirmary until now, and the devastation was painful to look at. The fires in the outer city had burned for nearly a day and a half after the battle, extinguished only by rainfall. The palace remained intact, though blackened at the bottom. The lush greenery of the canal islands had been replaced by withered dead trees and ash. The infirmaries were overcrowded with the wounded. The dead lay in neat lines by the beach, awaiting a proper burial.ā
This quotation shows the destruction and inhumanity of war. Not only do wars destroy human life, but they also decimate landscapes and cities. This can take many years to restore, if they are restored at all.
āSheād known Vaisra was a manipulator. Sheād known the Hesperians would come after her. But never had she dreamed that Nezha might hurt her. [ā¦]
Fool, she thought. You loved him and you trusted him, and you walked straight into his trap.
After Altan, she should have known better.ā
Nezhaās betrayal of Rin is one of the novelās biggest plot twists. Rin believes Nezha set a ātrapā for her; however, he tried to get her to conform to Hesperiaās vision of the world multiple times, including moments before he betrayed her, though Rin did not understand his meaning. However, forced assimilation is not true acceptance. This puts Nezha into a long line of men who have exploited Rinās vulnerability and manipulated her, including Altan and Vaisra.
āThe maps of war rearranged themselves in Rinās mind. The provincial lines disappeared. Everything was merely black and redāprivileged aristocracy against stark poverty. The numbers rebalanced, and the war sheād thought she was fighting suddenly looked very, very different.ā
Rin realizes that a revolution can occur in Nikan, but not if it is helmed by a privileged and aristocratic northerner who does now know about or care about most civilians who live in the country. She sees potential in civilians rising to fight en masse, rather than elite and selective militias. She now sees southerners as āherā people, and she readies herself to lead them in battle, foreshadowing the events of The Burning God.
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By R. F. Kuang