A Change of Mind

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"A Change of Mind"

"A Change of Mind" is a television episode of the British science fiction-allegorical series, The Prisoner. It was first broadcast on 15 December 1967. Themes explored include coerced confessions and medicalized political control; also conformity, methods of enforcing it, and the consequences of its rejection.[1]

Plot summary

Number 6 pursues his daily exercise routine in the woods. Two young toughs arrive and accuse him of being anti-social for not using the community gym and a fight ensues in which Number 6 prevails. In an ante-room to the Council Chamber, a Villager is seen desperately confessing to being "inadequate and anti-social", and being applauded by others for this admission. Number 6 is invited into the committee chamber to confess his lack of cooperation, but sarcastically declines to do so.

The Village newspaper, the Tally Ho, reports that Number 6 is due for "further investigation" and Villagers begin to shun him. Number 2 denies having any influence over the committee but warns of the consequences of non-compliance. Number 86, an attractive female, chides Number 6 for his non-cooperation.

Number 6's exposure of a community "rehab" process causes the committee to label him uncooperative, and he is taken to the Hospital where he encounters a Villager with a scar on his temple who says he had been labelled as "unmutual", but is now cured. Number 6 again appears before the committee and is told he will be labelled for conversion if he doesn't fall into line. He then reads in the Tally-Ho and hears over the public address system that he is officially "unmutual".

Next morning Number 6 is still being ostracized and Number 2 threatens him with a procedure called "social conversion". Number 6 is attacked by the irate Villagers and marched to the Hospital. There he is strapped to a table and the "conversion" process is explained to a Village television audience by Number 86, who is the chief technician in charge. Drugged, Number 6 is subjected to an ultra-sonic treatment which lobotomizes him.

Number 6 wakes up, apparently docile, returns to the community and is welcomed by all. In his flat he sees his cup of tea being drugged by Number 86 and pours it away. Number 2 arrives and questions Number 6 about his resignation, but is rebuffed. Number 2 and Number 86 discuss Number 6 and reveal that the "ultra-sonic" lobotomy was sham. Number 86, watching Number 6 remove the dressing covering his "operation scar", doubts that he has been properly conditioned but Number 2 insists that all is well. Number 86 tries to drug Number 6 again, but he takes over the tea-making process, switching the cups so that Number 86 drinks the drugged tea instead.

Back at the exercise site in the woods, the thugs again confront Number 6 who initially appears confused and unable to defend himself, but ultimately rallies and prevails. Number 86, still intoxicated with the drug, is hypnotised by Number 6 and explains how the conditioning process was faked; she is given certain undisclosed instructions by Number 6.

Number 6 visits Number 2 and convinces him that the ploy has worked, informing him that he wants to publicly confess to "everyone". Number 2 arranges for the whole village to hear Number 6 speak. The programmed Number 86 arrives on cue at the stroke of 4 o'clock and loudly charges Number 2 with being "unmutual". The Villagers turn on Number 2 who is eventually forced to flee.

Notes

  • In its depiction of attempts at political control, the episode can be seen as referencing both McCarthyism (in which "unmutual" is equivalent to "communist") and the show trials of Stalinist Russia (which often featured coerced confessions). (A modern example might be the term "racist" used to terminate political debate.) At one point, some of the other prisoners are shown going through a "self-criticism" exercise, which was an enforced practice in China during the Cultural Revolution (1966–76) of that time. The use of psychiatric techniques for political control (a kind of non-invasive lobotomy in this case) is also explored.[2]
  • The latest Number 2, as is typical in The Prisoner, becomes the victim of his own weaknesses and over-confidence in his ability to crack Number 6, a pattern developed almost to its extreme in "Hammer Into Anvil" and actually so in "Fall Out". Also typical is Number 2's reliance upon a female technical expert who is subvertible by Number 6's perspicacity, as also seen in "The Girl Who Was Death" and "A. B. and C.".
  • Matthew White points out that this episode has the "most unsympathetic portrayal of the common Villagers"[3] who oppress Number 6 and assist the "management" to an unprecedented degree.

Additional cast

References

  • White, Matthew; Jaffer Ali (1988). The Official Prisoner Companion. London: Sidgwick & Jackson. ISBN 0-283-99598-X.

Bibliography

External links