To achieve the overthrow of a regime one needs intelligence, and to build a base of support for your alternative ideology. If the regime is of the brutal type that tends to squash alternative modes of thought, this needs to be done very quietly and carefully. And if you're planning on going behind enemy lines it helps if you don't draw attention to yourself. The quiet power of the self-reliant introvert comes in very handy there,
I started thinking about instances of quiet power in the SF stories I love. In Anne McCaffrey's All the Weyrs of Pern, the quiet power is AIVAS, a rediscovered AI that teaches the descendants of the original colonists all the science they've forgotten since their ancestors landed on the planet 2,500 years ago. With a combination of that knowledge, the use of the colonists' bioengineered dragons, and some handy left-over antimatter drives, they change their orbit of a planet.
I think also of the quiet power of CJ Cherryh's Pyanfar Chanur. She's a tradeship captain who gets caught up in an interstellar, multi-species diplomatic incident. It's her trading smarts and ability to quietly hide that help her to save her ship and defy a vicious race of aliens that threatens the destruction of her home world.
Even among military SF stories there are examples of quiet power. In Elizabeth Moon's Vatta's War series Grace Vatta is an older woman who wields great power. She's the Rector of Defence for her planet, and gets to order its Spaceforce around.
A mind-wiped teenager in Teri Terry's Slated series of books keeps her reawakening memories of her past secret while she quietly uncovers the truth of a totalitarian government and its evil schemes. She watches, waits, gathers information, and when the time is right she destroys the evil system.
While kick-ass heroes create sound and fury and blow things up, the chances are that it's quiet power that figured out who the real enemy and real threats were.
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