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6 Reviews
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The 9th Stage of Identity Development,
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This review is from: The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) (Paperback)
I love the idea of a 9th Stage of "Transcendance" (yes, it's spelled "dance") with the virtue of "faith". Joan Erikson does hint at a certain element of pessimism over the deterioration of previous stages earned, going downhill in old age. However, in the end she speaks of the 9th stage that more than makes up for those losses. I think this stage could get a little more attention ..... transcendance and faith are worth teaching alongside the other 8 stages.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Erikson Crisis,
By Cavett (MAGNA, UTAH, US) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) (Paperback)
I love this book! I picked it up for pennies on Amazon, and will keep in handy forever. Do not settle for second-hand information about Erikson theory. This book is an easy read, and brings a simple understanding to the Erikson stages and crisis. I prefer Bowen's work, but for behavioral theory assignments, this is the best money you will spend.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good.,
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This review is from: The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) (Paperback)
The book is a difficult read but I needed it for a psych class so... It came perfectly new, exactly what i needed and what was advertised. Would definitely recommend.
67 of 103 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Remains valuable as historical perspective,
By
This review is from: The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) (Paperback)
Erikson's psychosocial stages of human development are standard fare in introductory psychology textbooks. In this slim volume you will find Erik's personal explanation of these stages and three short chapters by Joan (25 pages total) that elude to an additional ninth stage. Both authors were long-lived (Erik to 91; Joan to 93+), and, accordingly, offer a perspective that relatively few others will share.Having spent most of the last year teaching cognitive psychology, I was struck by the antiquated writing style and absence of empirical justification for Erik's conclusions. He is clearly indebted to the clinical observations and theoretical formulations of Sigmund Freud, and he devotes his entire first chapter to the task of making this indebtedness clear. It reads as though he were attempting to justify his slight deviation from the master. The second chapter is another apologia, this one specifically addressing the synthesis of Freud's psychosexual with Erik's psychosocial stages. It is in this chapter that Erik presents his (in)famous eight-stage chart, but it is not discussed in depth. The more detailed elaboration of the eight stages is attempted in chapter three. Erik starts with old age, rather than with infancy, arguing that the end goal is necessary to understand how the stages relate. His stage explanations are filed with word etymologies, casual references to clinical examples, and sweeping generalizations that embrace world histories, social movements, and philosophies. It would be hard to imagine how one could write this material to be more distinct from the careful limitations and operational definitions required in current psychological research. Erik's last contribution is an extension of the individual emphasis in psychoanalysis into the social realm where he develops the concept of ego development within a social milieu. The concluding chapters by Joan are quite different from what comes before. She advocates a ninth stage beyond old age but does not explicitly define details compatible with Erik's earlier charts. Her metaphorical style paints a picture of gerotranscendance (emphasis on "dance") in which healthy resolution of earlier stage conflicts leads to a deepening appreciation of the past while living within the constrained, care-receiving present. In this present moment Joan finds an expansion of self that embraces others and a sense of communion with all things, including death itself. These chapters read like a self-eulogy rather than additional theoretical work. I believe that more psychology students should read this book because it so clearly demonstrates the differences between what psychology once was and what psychology has become. There is quite a gulf between speculative theorizing and science. That a book this ensconced within the psychoanalytic worldview could have been published as late as 1982 gives one pause.
3 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Great,
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This review is from: The Life Cycle Completed (Hardcover)
The book contains very good descriptions of the life cycles expanding upon the Freudian psychosexual theory and incorporating Erikson's expansions along with his wife's analysis.
0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Quick ship on The Life Cycle Completed,
By
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This review is from: The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) (Paperback)
Good book. Great basis for describing the formation of human development in all of it's processes as explained by Erik and Joan Erikson.
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The Life Cycle Completed (Extended Version) by Erik H. Erikson (Paperback - June 17, 1998)
$14.95 $9.75
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