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Windows Live® Search Results Erik Erikson (1902-1994), American psychoanalyst who made major contributions to the field of psychology with his work on child development and on the identity crisis. Born in Frankfurt, Germany, Erikson was an artist and teacher in the late 1920s when he met the Austrian psychoanalyst Anna Freud. With her encouragement he began studying at the Vienna Psychoanalytic Institute, where he specialized in child psychoanalysis. In 1933 he emigrated to the United States, where he became interested in the influence of culture and society on child development. Erikson studied groups of Native American children to help formulate his theories. These studies enabled him to correlate personality growth with parental and societal values. His first book, Childhood and Society (1950), became a classic in the field. As he continued his clinical work with young people, Erikson developed the concept of the “identity crisis”, an inevitable conflict that accompanies the growth of a sense of identity in late adolescence. Among his other books are Young Man Luther (1958), Insight and Responsibility (1964), and Identity (1968).
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