Erikson Flashcards
(Erikson) General orientation to the theory:
- Erikson accepted basic notions of Freudian theory
- psychological structures
- the unconscious and conscious
- drives
- psychosexual stages …
- Expanded Freud`s theory:
- 1 by constructing a set of eight psychosocial stages covering the life span
- studying development of identity
- developing new methods
The background to Erikson’s psychosocial stages:
- Erikson perceived need to add a life-span psychosocial dimension to Freud`s theory
- ->Psychosocial stages corresponding to Freudian psychosexual stages - Psychosocial view: physical maturation has personal and social repercussions
- brings new skill that opens up new possibilities
- but also increases society`s demands
- “Fit” between child and culture
- Psychosocial development is culturally embedded:
- same sequence of stages in all cultures
- differences in how culture directs and enhances a child`s behavior
- cultures change over time
- Personality becomes increasingly differentiated as it unfolds in, and is shaped by, a particular environment
- Movement through a set of psychosocial “crises” or issues as the child matures
- ->Expansion of his radius of significant relationships
(Erikson) General nature of the theory:
- Maturation and society’s expectations eight crises a person must resolve
- Each issue most evident at a particular stage in the life cycle but appears in some form throughout development
- Each crisis: positive and negative outcomes possible
- Ideally, favorable ratio, in which the positive aspect dominates the negative
- If childhood crisis is not handled satisfactorily, a person continues to fight his early battles later in life
- Each stage builds on previous stages and influences the form of later stages
(Erikson) Emphasis on identity:
- Main theme of life is the quest for identity – understanding and acceptance of both the self and one’s society
- Question “who am I?” – different answer in each stage
- Identity begins when a baby “first recognizes his mother and first feels recognized by her, when her voice tells him he is somebody with a name and he’s good”
(Erikson) Expansion of psychoanalytic methodology:
- Erikson contributed to three methods for studying development:
- direct observation of children
- cross-cultural comparisons
- psychobiography
- “We must study man in action and not just man reflecting on reality” (quoted in Evans, 1967, p. 91)
- Studies and descriptions on contrasts between cultures
- Psychobiographies: analyses of psychosocial development of well-known people (e.g. Hitler, Luther)
(Erikson) What are the eight stages of the theory?
- Basic trust vs. basic mistrust (oral)
- Autonomy vs. shame and doubt (anal)
- Initiative vs. guilt (phallic)
- Industry vs. inferiority (latency)
- Identity and repudiation vs. identity diffusion (genital)
- Intimacy and solidarity vs. isolation
- Generativity vs. stagnation and self-absorption
- Integrity vs. despair
(Erikson) Stage 1: Basic trust vs. basic mistrust:
birth to 1 year
- Main task of infancy: acquire a favorable ratio of trust to mistrust
- Basic trust – “an essential trustfulness of others as well as a fundamental sense of one`s own trustworthiness”
- Babies develop trust in their caregiver and in themselves – e.g., from feeling that others accept them
- Mistrust necessary at all ages:
- to detect impending danger or discomfort
- to discriminate between honest and dishonest persons
- Psychosocial modality: oral experiences prototypes for getting and giving in return
(Erikson) Stage 2: Autonomy vs. shame and doubt:
2 to 3 years
- Children become more independent physically and psychologically
- ->new possibilities for personality development - Same time new vulnerabilities:
- anxiety over separation from parents
- fear that anal control may not always be possible
- Ideally, parents create supportive atmosphere in which children can develop sense of self-control without a loss of self-esteem
- Positive component: autonomy
- Negative component: shame and doubt
- Psychosocial modality: to hold (on), to let go
(Erikson) Stage 3: Initiative vs. guilt:
4 to 5 years
- „Children`s identification with their parents, who are perceived as big, powerful, and intrusive”
- Erikson accepted Freud`s account of Oedipus complex, but emphasized the social components more than the sexual
–>Identification brings with it a conscience, interests, attitudes, and sex-typed
behavior - Psychosocial modality: “making” – intrusion, taking the initiative, carrying out goals, competing; “to make like” (= playing)
- Children settle somewhere along dimension: successful initiative - overwhelming guilt
–>Guilt: due to overly severe conscience
(Erikson) Stage 4: Industry vs. Inferiority:
6 years to puberty
- Children enter the larger world of knowledge and work, „I am what I learn“
- Successful experiences:
- ->sense of industry, feeling of competence and mastery - Failure
- ->sense of inadequacy and inferiority - Psychosocial modality:
- to make things (=completing)
- to make things together
- Stages before were preparation for entry into society
- Calmer period, a time of psychosexual latency
(Erikson) Stage 5: Identity and repudiation vs.
identity diffusion:
adolescence
- Issues of earlier stages contribute to a child`s identity
- ->now this concern reaches a climax - Basic task: integrate various identifications or roles from childhood into a more complete identity
- If adolescents cannot integrate roles: “identity diffusion”
- Psychosocial modality: to be oneself or not to be oneself
- Youth seek their true selves through peer groups, clubs, religion, political movements etc.; try out new roles
- Society conveys which roles are valued
(Erikson) Stage 6: Intimacy and Solidarity vs. isolation:
young adulthood
- Only if well-integrated identity developed in stage 5, intimacy with other people (or oneself) is possible
- Romantic relationships, friendships and access to own intimate feelings and thoughts mark this stage
- Psychosocial modality: to lose and find oneself in another
- If attempts in intimacy fail isolation – relationships are stereotyped, cold, empty
(Erikson) Stage 7: Generativity vs. stagnation and self-absorption:
middle adulthood
- Generativity – “the interest in establishing and guiding the next generation”
- Prerequisites: faith in future, belief in the species, ability to care about others
- Psychosocial modality: to make be, to take care of
- Mechanism for continuity of society from generation to generation
- Lack of generativity -> stagnation, self-absorption, boredom, lack of psychological growth
(Erikson) Stage 8: integrity vs. despair:
late adulthood
- People must live with what they have built over their lifetime
- Ideally, they achieved integrity
- acceptance of the limitations of life,
- a sense of being a part of a larger history,
- a sense of owning the wisdom of the ages,
- a final integration of all previous stages
- Antithesis: despair
- regret for what he has done or not done with one’s life
- fear of approaching death
- Psychosocial modality: to be, through having been, to face not being
(Erikson) Mechanism of development:
- Physical maturation: general timetable for development
- Society exerts its influence at many levels – from ideology to how a parent cares
- Other mechanism of development come from Freud
- drives, frustrations from external and internal forces, attachment, and identification
- But: Erikson saw development as resolution of conflict from opposing forces
- ->e.g., a child integrates holding on and letting go, initiative and guilt - Play as a mechanism of development