While often criticized as a narrative remake of A New Hope , Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015) presents a sophisticated thematic architecture centered on the psychological burden of legacy. This paper argues that the film’s primary theme is not rebellion versus empire, but the struggle to define personal identity in the shadow of familial and historical failure. Through the parallel arcs of Rey, Kylo Ren, and Finn, the film explores how individuals either break from or are consumed by the past, ultimately proposing that true heroism lies not in inherited destiny but in chosen action.
The Echo of Legacy: Reconciling Heroism, Failure, and Identity in Star Wars: The Force Awakens force awakens theme
Finn’s narrative provides the most radical thematic statement: the rejection of one’s entire social inheritance. A stormtrooper raised from childhood to be a weapon, Finn has no family name and no heroic lineage. His “awakening” is not mystical but ethical. When he refuses to fire on civilians, he performs the film’s central act of agency: choosing goodness without any mythological precedent. Unlike Ren, who is paralyzed by his famous parents, or Rey, who seeks lost parents, Finn is free precisely because he has no legacy to honor. His lie about being a Resistance hero, followed by his genuine embrace of the role, underscores that identity is performative and elective. While often criticized as a narrative remake of