How Fantasy Explores Empire, Conquest, and Moral Compromise

An exploration of colonial narratives in fantasy fiction, from conquest and ideology to rebellion and moral compromise.

Fantasy has long engaged with themes of conquest and resistance, from The Lord of the Rings and its quiet pastoral defiance of industrial power to modern stories that interrogate empire, occupation, and control.

These stories use invented worlds to ask familiar questions about who benefits from conquest and who pays the price.

As I wrote The Knight and the Rebel, I found myself increasingly focused on the systems that enable conquest and the human consequences of pushing back against them.

What began as a character-driven story grew into an examination of ideology, loyalty, and moral compromise.

The Colonial Narrative in Fantasy

Colonial narratives in fantasy often follow a recognisable pattern.

An advanced civilisation arrives, declares itself more enlightened, and imposes order on people deemed backward or unruly.

The Ostreich Empire operates on this exact logic.

Its leaders sincerely believe they are improving Wiete through law, structure, and stability.

From within the Empire, conquest is framed as duty rather than violence.

Through Ragnar’s perspective, the reader experiences how persuasive this worldview can be.

He is rewarded, honoured, and elevated, which makes the system feel just even as it tightens its grip.

The Empire does not rely on swords alone.

It relies on language, incentives, and the promise of belonging.

Examples of Challenging Colonial Tropes

Image
Image

Some of the most compelling modern fantasy actively pushes against traditional colonial assumptions.

The Broken Earth trilogy presents oppression as structural and inescapable, forcing characters to survive inside systems designed to crush them.

Power in these books is never neutral, and survival often requires moral sacrifice.

The Priory of the Orange Tree shows how religion and history are shaped to justify domination.

Its ruling powers define civilisation on their own terms, then punish those who fall outside that definition.

These stories, like The Knight and the Rebel, examine how colonisation reshapes both identity and allegiance.

Writing Resistance in Fantasy

Writing resistance carries its own challenges.

It is tempting to present rebellion as noble and clean.

That version rarely feels honest.

Through Maja’s chapters, resistance appears messy, frightening, and fuelled by necessity rather than idealism.

People fight because survival leaves them no alternative.

Hope exists, but it is fragile and often compromised.

The Dandelion Dynasty captures this tension with particular clarity.

Revolution in that series brings freedom alongside loss, distortion, and unintended consequences.

The Moral Challenges of Resistance

One of my central concerns was how resistance movements risk becoming what they oppose.

Maja’s alliance with Asgar is not born of trust.

It is a calculation made under pressure.

She understands that his brutality may achieve results that restraint cannot.

At the same time, she fears what accepting his help might turn her into.

This tension reflects real historical struggles where moral certainty erodes under prolonged conflict.

Survival often demands choices that leave lasting scars.

The Role of Local Elites in Colonial Control

Colonial power rarely functions without cooperation from within.

Empires depend on local figures who benefit from alignment.

Ragnar’s knighthood serves this purpose.

His elevation signals legitimacy to the conquered population.

It suggests that the Empire rewards loyalty and recognises merit.

In reality, it binds Ragnar more tightly to Imperial goals.

This dynamic mirrors historical strategies where colonial authorities ruled through layered systems of favour and obligation.

Fantasy as a Lens for Colonialism

Fantasy provides distance that makes these themes easier to confront.

Worldbuilding allows writers to examine domination without recreating specific historical trauma.

In The Knight and the Rebel, mental influence and psychological control operate as metaphors for ideological pressure.

Power works by reshaping belief as much as behaviour.

Those under its influence often feel they are acting freely.

Showing Both Sides of Colonialism

Some readers have asked why the story follows both Ragnar and Maja rather than focusing solely on resistance.

Colonialism cannot be understood from one angle alone.

Ragnar shows how ordinary people justify participation in harmful systems.

Maja shows the cost of those justifications on real lives.

Placing these perspectives side by side exposes the gap between intention and consequence.

Modern Fantasy and Colonial Themes

Image
Image

Contemporary fantasy increasingly addresses conquest beyond the battlefield.

Culture, language, and belief now sit at the centre of many narratives.

The Poppy War confronts imperial violence and the personal toll of weaponised ideology.

The Daevabad Trilogy examines how power survives through tradition, faith, and selective memory.

These stories treat colonisation as a lived condition rather than a backdrop for adventure.

Fantasy’s Tools for Examining Power

Fantasy offers tools that realism often cannot.

Magic can represent technological dominance or cultural authority.

Invented species allow difference to be examined without direct analogy.

Created religions show how belief systems become instruments of control.

These elements make abstract systems visible at a human scale.

The Impact of Colonialism in The Knight and the Rebel

In The Knight and the Rebel, colonialism touches every character.

There are collaborators who believe they are doing good.

There are resistors who accept moral damage to survive.

No one emerges untouched.

There are no simple heroes and no clean victories.

If fantasy helps us recognise these patterns in safer forms, it may also sharpen how we see them in our own world.

Share Your Thoughts

Which fantasy stories have shaped how you think about empire and resistance?

Where do you feel the genre succeeds or falls short when handling these themes?

I would love to hear your thoughts in the comments below.

Author: joncronshawauthor

Best-selling author of fantasy and speculative fiction where hope bleeds but never dies.

Leave a Reply

Discover more from Jon Cronshaw - The King of Nobledark

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading