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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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and produces a rule, based on said excitations, for society to function more smoothly. If the group of boys<br />

is compared to a mind, with Ralph as the ego, one can clearly see that, like the ego in a mind, Ralph uses<br />

various types of excitation (internal, external, and cooperative) to bring about positive results.<br />

A second function of the ego according to Freud (1952) is “the task of bringing the influence of the<br />

external world to bear upon the id and its tendencies” (p. 702). Assuming that the character of Jack<br />

represents the concept of the id, it is Ralph’s responsibility, as the symbolic ego, to remind Jack of the<br />

external world. On the island, this external world is clearly viewed as the world of adults (everyone who is<br />

not on the island). By reminding Jack of what the boys had learned in the external world, Ralph helps to<br />

bring balance to the island. After winning the election for chief of the island over Jack, Ralph assures Jack<br />

that the choir will still belong to Jack, as it did before. Immediately, Jack suggests that the choir be the army<br />

of the island. Ralph sees that this suggestion is illogical in that there is no war on the island (as of yet).<br />

Instead, Ralph uses what he has learned in the external world to suggest that the choir be hunters. This<br />

more practical suggestion helps Jack to lead the choir in hunting and gathering food for the group of boys on<br />

the island. Later, while exploring the island, Ralph makes an observation: “There’s no village smoke, and<br />

no boats . . . I think it’s uninhabited” (Golding, 2003 p. 33). While Jack saw the same view, he made no<br />

such observation. In this, “It is easy to see that the ego is that part of the id which has been modified by the<br />

direct influence of the external world” (Freud, 1952, p. 702). Both Jack and Ralph went on the same hike<br />

up the mountain and came to the same vantage point, but Ralph, affected by the “direct influence of the<br />

external world” noted the lack of inhabitants on the island. Through his use of common sense of the<br />

external world in comparison to Jack, the id, Ralph clearly exhibits further characteristics of the ego.<br />

While on the island, Ralph is often faced with a question of logic versus passion. Rosenfield (1999)<br />

explains that “Ralph is every man—or child—and his body becomes the battleground where reason and<br />

instinct struggle, each to assert itself” (p. 4). This power struggle is most evident in confrontations between<br />

Jack, the embodiment of instinct, and Piggy, who thinks about everything logically. All too often, Ralph is<br />

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