Erik H. Erikson
Identity
Youth and Crisis
Identity: Youth and Crisis collects Erik H. Erikson's major essays on
topics originating in the concept of the adolescent identity crisis. Identity,
Erikson writes, is an unfathomable as it is all-pervasive. It deals with a process
that is located both in the core of the individual and in the core of the
communal culture. As the culture changes, new kinds of identity questions ariseErikson
comments, for example, on issues of social protest and changing gender roles that
were particular to the 1960s.
Representing two decades of groundbreaking work, the essays are not so much a
systematic formulation of theory as an evolving report that is both clinical
and theoretical. The subjects range from "creative confusion" in two famous livesthe
dramatist George Bernard Shaw and the philosopher William Jamesto the
connection between individual struggles and social order. "Race and the Wider
Identity" and the controversial "Womanhood and the Inner Space" are included in
the collection.
A winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award, Erik H. Erikson
was renowned worldwide as teacher, clinician, and theorist in the field of psychoanalysis
and human development.
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