Set "a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away," Tony Gilroy's Andor: A Star Wars Story (2022–25) chronicles the origins of the Rebel Alliance not as the mythic fulfillment of Jedi destiny but as the cultivation of covert counterpublics through insurgent speech. Instead of faceless stormtroopers and masked Sith Lords, the Empire appears as hegemonic order (Gramsci 1971), enforced through bureaucratic totalitarianism (Arendt 1951), panoptic surveillance (Foucault 1975), manufactured consent (Chomsky 1988), and counterinsurgent violence (Agamben 2005; Fanon 1961; Puar 2007). This paper argues that Andor stages rebellion as communicative insurgency: the creation of counterpublic (Fraser 1990) imagined communities (Anderson 1983) through performative declarations (Butler 1997), encoded cultural meaning (Hall 1973), and material reproduction (Benjamin 1968). Without the transcendental "Force," rebellion emerges as fragile and precarious, sparked through insurgent speech that catalyzes collectivity under repression. The series dramatizes this through pivotal monologues (Luthen's confession, Saw Gerrera's rant), fugitive utterances (Mon Mothma's Senate speech, Kino Loy's prison revolt), posthumous political tracts (Nemik's manifesto, Maarva's hologram), and cryptographic broadcast outside of sanctioned spaces of appearance (Arendt 1958). Foregrounding diegetic media, Andor shows how the Empire maintains power through propaganda, manufactured consent, and bureaucratic manipulation. The Emperor's spectral absence (Derrida 1993) renders sovereignty diffuse, locating authority instead in apparatuses of repression (Althusser 1971) and disciplinary power (Foucault 1975). As an allegory of insurgent communication, Andor uses the cognitive estrangement of science fiction (Suvin 1979) to critique authoritarianism in the present. By centering undocumented laborers (Bix, Wilmon), genocide survivors (Cassian), queer lovers (Vel, Cinta), and orphans of empire (Dedra, Kleya), the series reframes rebellion as a fragile infrastructure of speech and solidarity—an insistence that even in spaces of surveillance and violence, insurgent voices can collectivize into revolution.
Heidenescher et al. (Sat,) studied this question.