The Dominance of Freudian Id in The Black Cat
The Dominance of Freudian Id in The Black Cat
The Dominance of Freudian Id in The Black Cat
Dr. Benkhelifa
Research Methodology M1
19 December 2023
Edgar Allan Poe was an American writer, poet and literary critic. He is widely
regarded as a central figure within the literary movement, dark romanticism, which
emphasized the dark and mysterious aspects of human life. Poe wrote many works,
including poems and short stories. This paper is concerned with one of Poe’s well-
known short stories: “The Black Cat”. It seeks to analyze the short story from a
answer the question: how does the narrator’s Freudian id control and dominate his
psyche?
In “The Black Cat”, an unnamed alcoholic narrator walks a path that leads him
to the gallows. First, he adopts a black cat, named Pluto towards which he develops
affection and love. Soon, however, hatred surges within him towards the cat as it
starts to avoid him. Therefore, he cuts one of its eyes and later hangs it from a tree. As
his house is set on fire, the narrator sees an apparition of Pluto, which goes on hunting
and torturing him for months. One night in a tavern, the narrator sees another black
cat so similar to Pluto with the exception of a white mark on its chest. The narrator
takes it home. The cat displays fondness towards the narrator, but he soon finds
aversion within him towards it. He starts avoiding it until one day in the cellar when it
nearly makes him fall. He takes an axe and aims it at the cat, but his wife stops him so
he aims the blow at her instead. The narrator, then, hides the corpse of his dead wife
in the cellar. When investigators come, the narrator excitedly throws a can at the very
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spot where his wife is hidden. The sound of the second cat, which is hidden with the
wife, reveals the crime of the narrator and sends him to the gallows.
This paper seeks to analyze the short story using the Freudian three-part model
of the psyche: the id, ego and superego. Explaining this model is necessary to lay the
groundwork for the analysis. In Freud’s seminal work, The Ego and the Id (1923),
Freud introduces three psychic provinces: the id, ego and superego. “Freud classifies
the id as a dark instinct that is away from awareness, social order, and rational
behavioral patterns.” (Siddiqui et al. 6) The id is the part of the psyche that is driven
by desires, impulses, wants and needs, all of which it strives to gratify instantly. The
id is unconscious, and it unheeds rationality. The id’s desires, impulses, wants and
needs are part of either the pleasure instinct or the aggressive instinct. The ego is
another part of the human psyche. According to Ostow, “the ego is the agent of the id,
charged with the task of arranging the most appropriate circumstances for
serve the individual’s best interests.” (7) In other words, the ego operates on the
reality principle. It seeks to satisfy the id’s desires not impulsively but in a realistic
and socially acceptable way. The ego decides appropriateness in human behavior. It
appropriates such behavior by mediating between the id and the superego, which is
the part of the psyche that holds a “critical authority.” (Ostow 18) The superego
contains our internalized moral standards and ideals, which give us guidelines for
making judgments between the right and the wrong. Therefore, the superego
Early on in the short story, the narrator’s id derives pleasure from animals.
From an early age, the narrator was tender of heart. However, this tenderness was
subject to the ridicule of his childhood companions. “My tenderness of heart was even
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him minimize his human contact; instead, his ego applied what Freud describes as
great variety of pets. With these I spent most of my time, and never was so
happy as when feeding and caressing them. This peculiarity of character grew
His id induces him to seek pleasure from animals and from anything or anyone related
to them. In fact, he married and was happy with his wife only because she could
discharge his id’s desires. “I married early, and was happy to find in my wife a
disposition not uncongenial with my own.” (Poe 2) His wife satisfied his id when she
The narrator’s state of alcoholism causes him to lose grip on reality. (Djaffour
18) Early in the short story, the narrator mentions his drinking problem when he says,
“But my disease grew upon me—for what disease is like Alcohol?” (Poe 3) He calls it
a disease because it impairs his mental functioning. “Alcohol consumption may have
2) As alcohol changes the function of the nervous system, it alters cognitive function
represents the conscious part of the psyche as it deals with reality. From this vantage
point, it is safe to conclude that our narrator’s ego is eliminated by the effect of
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alcohol. Thus, the narrator’s regulator that can mediate between his id and superego is
absent.
What is also directly linked to the id is the aggression instinct or what Freud named
confess it) experienced a radical alteration for the worse. I grew, day by day,
His id starts aggressing his wife, and later moves to Pluto. It cuts one of its eyes and
then “in cool blood” hangs it from a tree. This shows that the id won the competition
After murdering Pluto, the narrator experiences if but a little remorse. “For
months I could not rid myself of the phantasm of the cat; and, during this period, there
came back into my spirit a half sentiment that seemed, but was not, remorse.” (Poe 5)
According to Siddiqui et al., after this incident, the superego as a moral consciousness
impulse took control and made the narrator feel guilty. (7) Since an early age, the
narrator’s superego internalized the virtue of tenderness. “I was noted for the docility
compassionate, gentle and kind. When the narrator’s id released its aggression
instinct, it breached such a superego virtue. This is what led the latter to chastise the
dominated his psyche after the incident of Pluto’s murder; however, its control did not
last long since the remorse itself was barely strong and also because his id’s craves for
After a few months of Pluto’s murder, the narrator’s id took into effect.
“…and to look about me, among the vile haunts which I now habitually frequented,
for another pet of the same species, and of somewhat similar appearance, with which
to supply its place.” (Poe 5-6) His id seeks to find a cat similar to Pluto because the
latter was once, if only for a little time, a source of pleasure. One night in a tavern as
he sat indulging in drunkenness satisfying his id’s desires, his attention “was suddenly
drawn to some black object…” (Poe 6) This black object was a cat, and it resembles
Pluto in every aspect but one, which is the white mark on its chest. According to
Kurniawan, the suddenness of the appearance of the second black cat was magical and
reinforced the idea of superstition within the narrator. (16) Early on, the narrator
mentions that his wife hinted casually to the superstition of black cats regarded as
witches in disguise. The narrator’s superego internalizes such belief. Because his id
craves for animal affection, the ego represses this belief in order to satisfy the id’s
desire; therefore, he develops friendship with Pluto. However, the second cat’s abrupt
appearance strengthened the belief of superstition. The superego warns the narrator of
the cat. This is manifested in the “surprise” the narrator experiences when the nature
of the black object is distinguished. Eventually, the belief is once again repressed, and
The second black cat forces the narrator’s id to form aggressive impulses.
Despite caressing the cat at first, the narrator states that he “soon found a dislike to
it...” (Poe 6) According to Kurniawan, the second cat was a source of unpleasantness
to the narrator. (17) The many similarities between the second cat and Pluto reminded
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the narrator of the latter. Not only did it remind him of Pluto itself, but it also
reminded him of the discomfort and displeasure Pluto caused him before and after its
murder by him. Thus, the second cat’s presence and its connection to Pluto underlie
vexing torments to the narrator. Such torments force his id to contemplate dark
thoughts.
“Beneath the pressure of torments such as these, the feeble remnant of the
Such evil thoughts well up the narrator’s id, eventually becoming malignant impulses
encouraged an irrepressible irrationality within the narrator. (7) What finally made the
narrator’s id able to channel those dark thoughts to the external world via Thanatos
was his horrendous deed to Pluto. The first crime gave the narrator’s id the confidence
to reach a maddening impulsivity. This is clearly depicted as the narrator goes to the
cellar when the second cat nearly makes him fall. “The cat followed me down the
The narrator, thus, acts on instinct, without any concern for the consequences that will
have to be faced by both his ego and superego. He uplifts an axe ready to fell the cat
“Uplifting an axe, and forgetting, in my wrath, the childish dread which had
hitherto stayed my hand, I aimed a blow at the animal which, of course, would
have proved instantly fatal had it descended as I wished. But this blow was
When his wife stopped him, the narrator’s ego used the Freudian term
“Displacement” as a defense mechanism. (Kurniawan 18) The narrator’s ego set out
to satisfy the id by substituting the cat with the wife. As a result, his id’s Thanatos
was released onto the wife instead of the cat. “Goaded, by the interference, into a rage
more than demoniacal, I withdrew my arm from her grasp, and buried the axe in her
brain. She fell dead upon the spot, without a groan.” (Poe 8) Hence, the narrator’s
“This time his behavior was lucid but bizarre when after murdering his wife,
there was no pattern of repentance, or guilt rather he hid the corpse of his wife in the
wall.” (Siddiqui et al. 7) After the incident, the narrator’s ego did another defense
unacceptable impulse of his wife’s murder. His ego started thinking of where to hide
the body. In all this, there was no room for his superego to interfere as a punisher;
“This hideous murder accomplished, I set myself forthwith, and with entire
deliberation, to the task of concealing the body. I knew that I could not remove
it from the house, either by day or by night, without the risk of being observed
Eventually, the narrator’s ego settled on hiding the body inside a wall located in the
cellar. Once doing that, his id was in a triumphant mood, having got rid of a source of
unpleasantness.
“I easily dislodged the bricks, and, having carefully deposited the body against
the inner wall, I propped it in that position, while, with little trouble, I relaid
satisfied…” (Poe 9)
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After hiding the body, the narrator’s id prompts him to look for the second cat. His
id’s desire to wipe this cat off existence heightens. “My next step was to look for the
beast which had been the cause of so much wretchedness; for I had, at length, firmly
resolved to put it to death.” (Poe 9) Three days passed and there was no sign of ‘the
beast.’ Thus, the narrator’s id was gratified as there was no ‘tormentor’, and he is
After getting rid of all sources of unpleasantness, including his wife who
attempted to stop him from murdering the second cat and the second cat itself which
disappeared apparently of its own accord, the narrator’s id’s impulsivity reached its
climax, thereby taking complete control over his psyche. According to Kurniawan, his
id was in an ecstatic mood. (18) Thus, this ecstasy was the very reason that led to his
downfall. This can be understood when we see the police coming to investigate the
disappearance of the narrator’s wife. The police searched the house thoroughly, but
they did not find his wife’s corpse. They were ready to leave when the narrator did
something that was completely driven by impulse. His id’s desire to assure the police
that he was not guilty overcame him. This desire put the narrator in a brain fog
condition. His ego could not help repress nor restrain it by way of a defense
mechanism. “The police were thoroughly satisfied, and prepared to depart. The glee at
my heart was too strong to be restrained. I burned to say if but one word, by way of
triumph…” (Poe 10) Eventually, the narrator succumbs to this desire. His id wins
again.
together;" and here, through the mere frenzy of bravado, I rapped heavily, with
a cane which I held in my hand, upon that very portion of the brickwork
behind which stood the corpse of the wife of my bosom.” (Poe 10)
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He throws a can towards the place where his wife was hidden, and the second cat
gives a shriek that finally exposes the corpse of the narrator’s wife to the police, and
To sum up, the analysis of Poe’s short story “The Black Cat” from a Freudian
perspective gives an insight about how the narrator’s psyche really works. Applying
Freudian three-part model of the psyche to the short story, one can see how the id, the
ego and the superego of the narrator operate. Throughout the story, alcohol acts as an
external stimulus that triggers the disinhibition of the id’s desires and impulses,
Although the superego makes the narrator remorseful once, the guilt is not as
powerful as need be to make him stop and reconsider his actions. In addition, the ego
is not in a sound state due to alcohol effect; therefore, it serves as an all-time gratifier
of the id.
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Works Cited
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https://doi.org/10.1093/alcalc/agh177
Kurniawan, Kwee Ayu Hapsari. A Psychoanalysis on Edgar Allan Poe's Black Cat.
https://repository.uksw.edu/bitstream/123456789/5500/3/T1_112010141_Full%2
0text.pdf
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1959.tb54731.x
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http://www.aimspress.com/article/doi/10.3934/Neuroscience.2021021
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Siddiqui, Safia, et al. “The Psycho-Somesthetic Sense and Self: A Freudian Analysis of
Edger Allen Poe’s Short Stories the Black Cat and Tell-Tale Heart.” Pakistan
https://ojs.plhr.org.pk/journal/article/view/393