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The Epic of Gilgamesh and Fight Club (a novel by Chuck Palhaniuk) show mentally unstable main characters with very strong, animalistic second halves to them. The psychic apparatus consists of the more animalistic part of the conscious (the id), the organized moderator of desires (the ego), and the part of the conscious that aims for perfection (the superego). Tyler Durden is the Narrator’s id whereas the Narrator himself is his ego and superego. It is known that Tyler is the Narrator’s subconscious creation to store his id. The Epic of Gilgamesh is also about the id, ego, and superego of the main character. Enkidu represents the id of Gilgamesh while Gilgamesh himself represents his ego and superego. Both Enkidu and Tyler Durden are physical presences in each story, but they are really the psychosomatic manifestations of Gilgamesh and the Narrator meant to contain Gilgamesh’s and the Narrator’s animalistic ids separately from the rest of their minds..
Egos tend to listen to the id and Gilgamesh and the Narrator’s egos are no different; it’s their superegos that act differently from the superegos in mentally stable people. The superego is the part of the psyche that moderates what the ego does. The Narrator and Gilgamesh’s superegos don’t moderate what their egos do as much as they should. Their egos follow their ids almost completely: “Enkidu made his voice heard and spoke; he said to Gilgamesh, ‘My friend, why do you talk like a coward? And your speech was feeble, and you tried to hide,” (Gilgamesh V 72). Enkidu pushes Gilgamesh into the things that he’s afraid of. He is reckless and animalistic and tries to make Gilgamesh like him. If Gilgamesh didn’t have such a strong id, he would never go into the situations that Enk...

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Both Gilgamesh and the Narrator have very strong ids and fairly weak superegos. They need something to store their ids in so they create psychosomatic manifestations (mentally stable people don’t need that extra “storage unit” for parts of their psyches). Enkidu and Tyler Durden are physical presences in each respective story, though. Both the Narrator and Gilgamesh become too dependent on their ids. When they lose their subconscious creations that they store their ids in, they fall apart. They lose that entire part of their mind. An id is just as necessary as an ego or a superego. Gilgamesh becomes unrecognizable and the Narrator gets sent to a mental hospital. They both lose their sanity since their psyches can’t function without their ids, but as Tyler Durden said, “It’s only when you have lost everything that you are free to do anything” (Palhaniuk 70).

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