Study Guide: Lord of The Flies
Study Guide: Lord of The Flies
Study Guide: Lord of The Flies
Psychological Terms
The following explanations come from the textbook Introduction to Psychology, Ninth Edition, so when
citing these definitions, you should use the bibliographic entry:
Atkinson, et al. Introduction to Psychology, Ninth Edition,. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
Inc. 1987.
These excerpts provide only the barest outline of some of Sigmund Freud's theories.
Psychoanalytic theories explore the private personality—the unconscious motives that direct behavior.
Psychoanalytic theory is also concerned with the way in which personality develops.
Freud compared the human mind to an iceberg. The small part that shows above the surface of the
water represents conscious experience; the much larger mass below water level represents the
unconscious, a storehouse of impulses, passions, and inaccessible memories that affect our thoughts
and behavior.
Freud believed that personality is composed of three major systems: the id, the ego, and the
superego. Each system has its own functions, but the three interact to govern behavior.
Id
The part of the personality reflecting unorganized, instinctual impulses. If unbridled, it seeks
immediate gratification of primitive needs.
Ego
The part of the personality corresponding most nearly to the perceived self, the controlling self
that holds back the impulsiveness of the id in the effort to delay gratification until it can be found
in socially approved ways.
Superego
The part of the personality corresponding most nearly to conscience, controlling through moral
scruples rather than by way of social expediency. The superego is said to be an uncompromising
and punishing conscience.
Anxiety
The desires of the id are powerful forces that must be expressed in some way; prohibiting their
expression does not abolish them. Individuals with an urge to do something for which they will
be punished become anxious. Methods of anxiety reduction are called defense mechanisms.
Displacement
One way of reducing anxiety is to express the impulse in disguised form, thereby avoiding
punishment by society and condemnation by the superego. Aggressive impulses, for example,
may be displaced to racing sports cars or to championing political causes.
Repression
A defense mechanism in which an impulse or memory that is distressing or might provoke
feelings of guilt is excluded from conscious awareness, by being pushed out of awareness into
the unconscious.
Suppression
A process of self-control in which impulses, tendencies to action, and wishes to perform
disapproved acts are in awareness but not overtly revealed.
Projection
A defense mechanism by which people protect themselves from awareness of their own
undesirable traits by attributing those traits excessively to others.
Unconscious
Memories, impulses and desires that are not available to consciousness. According to the
psychoanalytic theories of Freud, painful memories and wishes are sometimes repressed – that
is, diverted to the unconscious where they continue to influence our actions even though we are
not aware of them.
The Id
The id is the most primitive part of the personality, from which the ego and the superego later
develop. It is present in the newborn infant and consists of the basic biological impulses (or
drives): the need to eat, to drink, to eliminate wastes, to avoid pain, and to gain sexual pleasure.
Freud believed that aggression is also a basic biological drive. The id seeks immediate
gratification of these impulses. Like a young child, the id operates on the pleasure principle: it
endeavors to avoid pain and to obtain pleasure, regardless of the external circumstances.
The Ego
Children soon learn that their impulses cannot always be gratified immediately. Hunger must
wait until someone provides food. The satisfaction of relieving bladder or bowel pressure must be
delayed until the bathroom is reached. Certain impulses—hitting someone or playing with the
genitals—may elicit punishment from a parent. A new part of the personality, the ego, develops
as the young child learns to consider the demands of reality. The ego obeys the reality principle:
the gratification of impulses must be delayed until the appropriate environmental conditions are
found. It is essentially the "executive" of the personality: it decides what actions are appropriate
and which id impulses will be satisfied and in what manner. The ego mediates among the
demands of the id, the realities of the world, and the demands of the superego.
The Superego
The third part of the personality, the superego, is the internalized representation of the values
and morals of society as taught to the child by the parents and others. It is essentially the
individual's conscience. The superego judges whether an action is right or wrong. The id seeks
pleasure, the ego tests reality, and the superego strives for perfection. The superego develops in
response to parental rewards and punishments. It incorporates all the actions for which the child
is punished or reprimanded, as well as all the actions for which the child is rewarded.
Initially, parents control children's behavior directly by reward and punishment. Through the
incorporation of parental standards into the superego, a child brings behavior under control.
Children no longer need anyone to tell them it is wrong to steal; their superego tells them.
Violation of the superego's standards, or even the impulse to do so, produces anxiety over the
loss of parental love. According to Freud, this anxiety is largely unconscious; the conscious
emotion is guilt. If the parental standards are overly rigid, the individual may be guilt-ridden and
inhibit all aggressive or sexual impulses. In contrast, an individual who fails to incorporate any
standards for acceptable social behavior will have few behavioral constraints and may engage in
excessively self-indulgent or criminal behavior.
Question: What happens when the superego is weak (as is the case in a young child) and the
external parental or social control is removed?
Social Psychology
Social psychology is in part the study of how an individual's thoughts, feelings, and behaviors
are influenced by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others. The presence of others
includes notions of deindividuation and bystander intervention, which both include notions of
the diffusion of responsibility (i.e., when each individual knows that many others are present,
each can think that the burden of responsibility does not fall solely on him or her).
Social Influence
Deindividuation
Deindividutation theory explains individual behavior when in a crowd. The idea is that the
individual's sense of self is diminished and replaced by a social identity, and generic social
norms are replaced by the norms of the crowd (some of which may also happen to coincide
with the generic social norms). The psychological state of deindividuation is marked by
reductions in the individual's self-restraint and inhibitions. For more details, see Chapter 18 in
Introduction to Psychology and the Tom Postmes's essay, "Deindividuation," (partially
excerpted below).
"In social psychology, deindividuation is a major theory of group behavior: it provides an explanation
of collective behavior of violent crowds, mindless hooligans, and the lynch mob. In addition,
deindividuation has been associated with other social phenomena such as genocide, stereotyping, and
disinhibition in other settings such as computer-mediated communication. [...] Deindividuation hinders
reflection about the consequences of actions, rendering social norms impotent while increasing
suggestibility to random outside influences." (Postmes, Deindividuation).
Bibliography
Atkinson, et al. Introduction to Psychology, Ninth Edition,. Orlando, FL: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
Inc. 1987.
Postmes, Tom. "Deindividuation." http://www.ex.ac.uk/~tpostmes/deindividuation.html. Accessed
2/01/03.