Preview

Erick Erikson Stages

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1173 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Erick Erikson Stages
Erik Erikson was a psychologist who came up with the theory that everyone goes through eight stages of psychosocial development in their lifetime. This theory is called the "epigenetic principle." How we go through each stage is determined by the situations, or development "tasks," in our lives. Each stage has a task that is referred to with a two-word phrase, such as ‘trust-mistrust' in the infant's stage. Also, each stage has what is called an ‘optimal time,' which means that each stage can only happen at certain times in the person's life. No stages can be skipped, but the time it takes to go through each stage can vary. The eight stages, and the approximate ages for them are:

1. Oral-sensory stage - ages 0 to 1½
2. Anal-muscular
…show more content…

Maturity - age 50 and over

After watching "Walk The Line," the film about the life of singer Johnny Cash, it is easy to distinguish the psychosocial stages of Johnny Cash's life. There were a few stages left out of the film, but it is fairly simple to hypothesize about what occurred during those stages based on everything else the film shows. Just about every major turning point in Johnny Cash's life is depicted in the film, so it is safe to say that this is a good film to analyze. The first of the eight stages of psychosocial development, the oral-sensory stage, is not shown in the film. However, this is the stage where the child makes the trust-mistrust turn, and judging by Johnny Cash's personality in the rest of the film, his first stage went towards the "mistrust" side. His father never seemed to want to get close to him, so I would guess that he did the same thing during Johnny's first year or so. The distance between him and his father probably made Johnny less able to trust adults in his early
…show more content…

This stage is when a child is supposed to develop their sense of responsibility. The child is also supposed to make a decision between narrow virtuosity and inertia. Johnny's decision is never really clear to me, but if I had to pick one, it would be narrow virtuosity. He spends a lot of time later in his life working to support himself and a family, and also trying to get his career going, which tells me that he always would rather work hard than be lazy. Johnny tries his best to make his father proud, but often does not succeed. He developed into a boy that was always day-dreaming, and leaned toward the artistic side of things. When he was 10 years old, his older brother, Jack, was killed in a wood-cutting accident, and Johnny never seemed to get over that, and always blamed himself for it because he left his brother alone. Immediately before Jack's death, Johnny's father asked him "where the hell have you been?!" Johnny made it to the hospital to be with his brother when he passed, but his father's words always haunted him, and gave him the feeling that his father blamed him for Jack's death. The fifth stage, adolescence, is also not really shown in the film, but we can assume that Johnny continued working on his musical talents and doing what most adolescents do, which is try to find their place in the world. Johnny was probably still dealing with

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    After Johnny was beat up, the gang has been watching and always being with Johnny to protect him. Chapter 2- In chapter two, Johnny is with Dally and Ponyboy to the drive in movies. But in this chapter, Johnny character I developing and kind of cluing into the next chapters.…

    • 648 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    He has gotten beat up, slapped by his brother. But the last on is the worst." You really killed him, huh, Johnny? Yeah. His voice quivering slightly. I had to. They were drowning you, Pony. They might have killed you." All of them had added up into the factor that changed him. After running away because his friend had kill a boy, they were stuck in hiding for about a week. During this time he had a lot of time to think. Some people believe he changed because of the time he had to think and what he has gone thru. In the soothing changed in…

    • 498 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Early life for Johnny Hendrix wasn’t of the average status quo when it came to normality. Johnny was born in a voodoo shop in the French Quarter of New Orleans. His parents were not exactly ideal for what you would want a parent to be like. Johnny’s mom was addicted to every hard drug known to man. Johnny’s dad was a porn star who was always off filming somewhere. Johnny didn’t have any siblings. He was supposedly a mistake himself. His dad said that while he was shooting one of his homemade porn videos with Johnny’s mom he accidently got her pregnant with Johnny. After Johnny heard this he felt like he had no purpose at all for the world. This is where Carlino came in.…

    • 698 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the novel Rite of Passage, by Richard Wright, the protagonist Johnny is going through several changes. One of those were that his parents weren't his real parents, so he joined a gang. Johnny demonstrates various traits that display what has transpired on his journey. The attributes the character is displaying in his life is belligerent and obedient.…

    • 286 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    At the beginning of the novel, Johnny didn’t want anything to do with Negroes. He was racist and unkind to them. When he is captured by Cush, a Union soldier who also happens to be a Negro, he refused to follow his orders, only doing so in the end out of fear of what might happen to his family if he is killed. Later, when Cush wanted to learn how to read, seeing how he was never educated, Johnny refused at first, only giving in so that he could deliberately misinform Cush on some specific words, such as broke instead of brought, eagles instead of equal, and more. He didn’t see how Cush wasn’t that much different than himself.…

    • 1202 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    He comes from an extremely abusive home and needs the greaser gang just as much as they needed him. He needs them for protection and a sense of purpose. While the gang needs him because Johnny gives them a sense of purpose and justification of their violence without Johnny, the gang would be next to nothing. Johnny has big black eyes, a tanned face, jet-black hair with grease in it and has a slight build. Due to his father constantly beating him and his mother who always ignores him the greasers are always looking out for Johnny and trying to protect him. Dally who is the leader of the greasers especially watches out for Johnny, in return he hero worships Dally. Throughout the novel Johnny changes at various times. First a usually mild and quiet Johnny murders Bob and then takes control of the situation proven by when he told Ponyboy to go to Dally knowing he will get them out of trouble and when he goes out and gets supplies. Later on he changes in his relationship with Ponyboy, during their five-day stay in Windrixville they both grow extremely close, even closer than they were…

    • 1877 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Johnny wanted to kill himself because of his parents. Johnny didn’t though…

    • 608 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Johnny Cade, from the book The Outsiders, lost his innocence in numerous ways such as having to endure getting abused for years by his parents, getting beat up the Socs, and feeling the pain of ending someone’s life. Johnny lives in a home that is rough and unsafe, which drastically impacted all of his life decisions and choices. As a result of all of these choices, he’s thrust into a life that many people don’t understand, and encounters many life-changing dilemmas that cause him to grow up and lose his naiveness. An example of this is when he gets jumped by the Socs, so he promises to hurt the next person who tries to hurt him, which he ends up doing. Once he kills Bob, he loses what little innocence he had left and sees the world in a different,…

    • 185 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Johnny Tremain Analysis

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages

    One of thehis most significant ways Johnny Tremain matures is he divulges to his sense of self-worth. In the beginning of the story, Johnny has a tenacious sense of self worth. He take much pride due to the fact he is a skilled silversmith, that he is allowed to give commands to Dove and Dusty. Also, Mr. Lapham thinks so highly of him that he will be allowed to marry one of his daughters and inherit the family business. Of course his injury changes this. In effect it brings about subconscious…

    • 446 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Johnny and Ray

    • 1175 Words
    • 5 Pages

    One wouldn’t think that the lives of Johnny Cash and Ray Charles have anything in common. However, after viewing the movies Walk the Line, starring Joaquin Phoenix as Johnny Cash and Reese Witherspoon as June Carter, and Ray, starring Jamie Foxx portraying Ray Charles, their similarities are as striking as their differences. Both of these films are biopics chronicling the rags to riches lives of two of the most influential musicians whose careers began in the 1950s. Walk the Line is a love story depicting the courtship intertwined with the careers of Johnny Cash and June Carter. Ray is a docudrama centered around the career of Ray Charles. Cash and Charles enjoyed illustrious music careers, despite personal tragedies, illicit drug use, and the changing social landscape of civil rights.…

    • 1175 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    My younger brother Nicholas is 15 years old, my choice is to explain his current stage according to Erikson. In January Nicholas will be 16 and currently I see him living or falling in the Stage 5 which is Adolescence or Young Adulthood(Identity vs. Role confusion).…

    • 830 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Johnny felt as if no cared and that even if he lived in a gang his parents wouldn’t do anything. Another example is when Darry hits Ponyboy for being late home and Ponyboy runs away. Darry…

    • 697 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Glass Castle

    • 2757 Words
    • 12 Pages

    Erikson posited that there are eight stages of psychosocial development that a human being goes through during his or her lifetime. A person is faced with a crisis or challenge in each stage and how one deals with or masters that crisis determines how fully developed a person they become. Each stage builds on the previous stages and if one does not master the stage, and then it may cause problems later in life.…

    • 2757 Words
    • 12 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Pigman

    • 11745 Words
    • 47 Pages

    He is a sophomore in a New York City high school. He is terribly dissatisfied with his life and misbehaves in interesting ways to try to give meaning to his own existence. He appears to have great potential and wants to be an actor. Like most teens, he will eventually discover that he, and he alone, makes his life whatever it will become. John is a complicated guy. First of all, he has a real problem with any kind of authority. He is in constant conflict with his father; he lies to his teachers and refers to them as "retarded." In fact, he lies to pretty much everybody, except Lorraine. In school he spends his time setting off firecrackers in the bathroom and playing pranks on substitutes, though he says those days are behind him now. Despite disliking authority figures and school, he's really smart and can get good grades when he wants to. However, more often he uses his intelligence, good looks, and charm to manipulate people. Lorraine tells us that John is "extremely handsome" (2), and John immodestly agrees: "Like Lorraine told you, I really am very handsome and I do have fabulous eyes" (3). John writes that he's "going to be a great actor" (3), and, with his good looks and imagination, we can well believe it. John also has a softer, compassionate side, and thinks deeply about the meaning of life and death. Lorraine tells us that John would be "the last person on earth" (2) to show that he has compassion, and that he pretends he doesn't care about anything in the world. He is only fifteen, but is already a heavy drinker and a heavy smoker. Let's break this down:John and his ParentsJohn does not get along with his parents, especially his father, whom he refers to as "Bore." One of the first things we learn…

    • 11745 Words
    • 47 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Erik Erikson’s theory of psychosocial stages of development has been widely accepted as a matured and much sounder judgment of cognitive development of humans and his social interactions. According to the theory, a successful completion of each stages of development returns a handsomely healthy personality and how we view the world around us.…

    • 2236 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics