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Joan Erikson

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Joan Erikson
Born
Sarah Lucretia Serson

(1903-06-27)June 27, 1903
DiedAugust 3, 1997(1997-08-03) (aged 94)
NationalityNaturalized United States citizen
Occupation(s)Collaborator with her husband, Erik Erikson, author, educator, craftsperson, weaver, jeweler, beadwork, dance ethnographer[2][3]
Known forHelped reshape the prevailing psychological view of human development[3]
Spouse
(m. 1930; died 1994)

Joan Mowat Erikson (born Sarah Lucretia Serson;[4][5] June 27, 1903 – August 3, 1997) was well known as the collaborator with her husband, Erik Erikson, and as an author, educator, craftsperson, and dance ethnographer.[2][3]

Early life

Joan Erikson was born in Brockville, Ontario, one of three children of John Reaby and Mary Louise MacDonald Serson. Her father (who died when she was six[6]) and her brother were priests ordained in the Anglican Church of Canada. Her birth name was Sarah Lucretia Serson.[7][3] She later changed her name to Sarah Mowat Serson, then to Sally Mowat Serson, then to Joan Mowat Serson. When she married Erik she became Joan Mowat Homburger, and, in 1939, became Joan Mowat Erikson when she and Erik were naturalized as U.S. citizens "using the self-invented name Erikson."[8]

Moves to Vienna and the United States

Joan moved to Vienna to conduct dance research for her doctoral dissertation and there met her husband-to-be Erik Homborger, who was working at a progressive school started by Anna Freud. Joan and Erik married in 1930. Joan persuaded Erik to move to the United States three years later ("to escape European fascism"), where they became citizens in 1939. [3][9] The Eriksons spent time at Harvard and Yale Universities, and then moved to the University of California at Berkeley.[3]

The Eriksons' daughter, Sue Erikson Bloland, says that, in the eyes of her father, her mother was "the ultimate source of strength and wisdom within the family (if not the universe), the real healer, the solver of all problems both practical and personal.[10] Judith Wallerstein, a longtime friend, said that "to her husband, Joan was always bigger than life. Far beyond the lovely and loving woman he married, she represented to him all women–the very essence of the feminine ideals of beauty, compassion, nurturance, and strength."[11]

In 1944, Joan gave birth to a fourth child, Neil, who was born with Down's Syndrome and was immediately institutionalized.[12]

Joan died on August 3, 1997, in a nursing home in Brewster, Massachusetts, three years after the death of her husband, Erik.[13] Mrs. Erikson's survivors included two sons, Kai of Hamden, Conn., and Jon of Port Angeles, Wash.; a daughter, Sue Bloland of Manhattan, and three grandchildren.[3]

Education and professional accomplishments

Joan obtained an undergraduate degree from Barnard College and a master's from Columbia's Teachers College. She completed doctorate course work before moving to Europe to conduct research for a dance dissertation.[3] She spent time observing dance schools and teaching dance to children in Austria and Germany.[14] After meeting husband Erik Erikson, Joan stopped research for her dissertation and took a job at the progressive school in Vienna, where he was working.[3] She believed that children should be taught based on their interests, and structured lessons accordingly.[14] She taught English to many of the psychoanalysts at the school, including her husband.[3][14]

During their time spent at the University of California at Berkeley, the Eriksons created the eight cycles of psychosocial development and Joan began her interest in arts and crafts, crucial to her later work in art therapy.[3] In 1951, Joan became the director of activities at the Austen Riggs Center, a psychiatric treatment facility for children and adults in Stockbridge, Massachusetts. She created the Theatre Program and the Montessori Nursery School there.[14][15]

Joan and Erik later returned to Harvard, where they taught classes together at the Joan and Erik Erikson Center.[3] In the 1970s, Joan continued her art therapy work with adolescents at Mt. Zion Hospital in San Francisco.[14] She wrote several books, including The Universal Bead; Activity, Recovery, and Growth; and Wisdom and the Senses.[16]

Psychosocial development

Joan Erikson was the main collaborator in developing husband Erik Erikson's eight stages of psychosocial development. Her contribution to Erikson's theory of personality could have been neglected, but was nevertheless important: Erik admitted being unable to distinguish between his own contribution and his wife's.[17] Joan had a great influence on the development of the stages and on the inclusion of the eighth stage.[3]

The pair created the stages as they were experiencing them themselves, and after Erik's death in 1994, Joan added a ninth stage of very old age. This ninth stage is experienced in the eighties and nineties and is accompanied by a loss of physical health, friends, family members, and independence, in addition to isolation from society. Often during this time, individuals are put into retirement communities and assisted living facilities, which Joan believed was isolating them from society and from youth.[18] She believed that "aging is a process of becoming free"[14] and should not be treated as the opposite.[18] As a result of these changes, individuals experience a loss of autonomy, self-esteem, and trust. Death is near and seen as an inevitable reality. Joan contributed to the writings on the first eight stages in the book, The Life Cycle Completed, and later added the final part on the ninth stage.[18]

Art therapy

Joan Erikson believed that the arts possess their own healing properties and can be used as an exclusive form of therapy.[19] She believed that people's artwork should not be psychoanalyzed or interpreted but should be used solely for healing through creative process.[14] She came into conflict with Anna Freud over this issue while working at the school in Vienna, stating that children's creativity should not be psychoanalyzed.[5]

Joan created the Activities Program at the Austin Riggs Center in Massachusetts, which included a theatre program and other artistic outlets for patients.[15] There, Joan worked with Ellen Kivnick to determine which types of creative practices led to improved psychological development in children and youth. They thought that using materials that can change shape could change the shape of a child's psyche. Joan encouraged artwork to be its own form of healing and to help patients learn new skills, instead of focusing on an absence of skills or abilities. Her relationship with patients was not one of a therapist to patient, but one between artists.[19]

Importance of play

Joan Erikson was an advocate of play throughout life, which she defined as something to do "for your own pleasure because you find it amusing and enhancing somehow." (page 2)[14] Play can be anything from art, to sports, to conversation. Joan thought that adults spend too much time doing what they think they are supposed to be doing, and not taking time to do what they enjoy. She related play and humor, and believed that without a sense of humor, people lose freedom and the ability to play.[14]

Bibliography

  • Wisdom and the Senses: The Way of Creativity (1988)
  • Activity, Recovery, Growth: The Communal Role of Planned Activities (1978)
  • "The Arts as Healing" in American Journal of Orthopsychiatry (with H. Kivnick, 1983)
  • Vital Involvement in Old Age (with E.H. Erikson and H. Kivnick, 1986)
  • Life Cycle Completed: Extended Version (with E.H. Erikson, 1987)
  • The Universal Bead (1993)
  • Saint Francis and His Four Ladies (1970)
  • Legacies (1993)

See also

References

  1. ^ Ontario Births, 1869-1912
  2. ^ a b "Joan Erikson, Life Cycles Theorist, Dies" in Harvard University Gazette, September 11, 1997. Online at http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/1997/09.11/JoanEriksonLife.html.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Robert Mcg. Thomas Jr. (8 August 1997). "Joan Erikson Is Dead at 95; Shaped Thought on Life Cycles". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 July 2020. Joan Mowat Erikson, who helped reshape the prevailing psychological view of human development through a six-decade, all-senses collaboration with her husband, Erik Erikson, and still found time to pursue her own interests in arts and crafts, education and dance, died on Sunday at a nursing home in Brewster, Mass. She was 95.
  4. ^ Fine, Paul (March 2011). "Some Thoughts About Wisdom Keepers". American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. Retrieved December 3, 2015.
  5. ^ a b Benveniste, Daniel (2000). "Erik H. Erikson: An Outsider At the Center of Things". The Psychoanalytic Review. 87 (6).
  6. ^ Wallerstein, Judith (1997). "Joan Erikson–In Memoriam" (October 4, 1997) online at http://gos.sbc.edu/w/wallerstein1.html.
  7. ^ "Rev. John Reaby Serson" online at http://teamapproach.ca/tal/serson/sersnrev.html Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed December 6, 2015.
  8. ^ Benveniste, Daniel (2000). "Erik H. Erikson: An Outsider at the Center of Things" in Benveniste, D. (2000) Book Review of Identity's Architect: A Biography of Erik Erikson by Lawrence J. Friedman. The Psychoanalytic Review. Vol. 87, No. 6. p. 5. Online at http://internationalpsychoanalysis.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/7.-Erikson-Biography-Review-.pdf Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine.
    Fine, Paul (2011). "Some Thoughts About Wisdom Keepers," American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry. Online at http://www.aacap.org/aacap/custom/googlesearch.aspx?q=Paul%20Fine&cx=005963334930150341854:fhyugbr2cou.
  9. ^ Fine, Paul (2011). "Some Thoughts About Wisdom Keepers," American Academy of Child Adolescent Psychiatry online at http://www.aacap.org/aacap/custom/googlesearch.aspx?q=Paul%20Fine&cx=005963334930150341854:fhyugbr2cou.
    Daniel, Benveniste. (1998). "The Importance of Play in Adulthood: A Dialogue with Joan M. Erikson" in The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child, Vol. 53 (1998), 6. Online at http://internationalpsychoanalysis.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/9.-Joan-Erikson-Importance-of-Play.pdf.
    Fleming, James S., "Erikson's Psychosocial Developmental Stages" online at http://swppr.org/Textbook/Ch%209%20Erikson.pdf.
  10. ^ Bloland, Sue Erikson (1999). "Fame: The Power and Cost of a Fantasy" in The Atlantic, November 1999 Issue, Online at https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/1999/11/fame-the-power-and-cost-of-a-fantasy/377856/.
  11. ^ Wallerstein, Judith. (1997). "Joan Erikson–In Memoriam" (October 4, 1997) online at http://gos.sbc.edu/w/wallerstein1.html.
  12. ^ Eisold, Barbara (2004). "A Review of Susan Erikson Bloland, In the Shadow of Fame: A Memoir by the Daughter of Erik Erikson (New York: Viking Press, 2004)" online at http://www.apadivisions.org/division-39/publications/reviews/shadow-fame.aspx.
  13. ^ "Joan Erikson, Life Cycles Theorist, Dies" in Harvard University Gazette, September 11, 1997. Online at http://news.harvard.edu/gazette/1997/09.11/JoanEriksonLife.html.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Benveniste, Daniel (1998). "The Importance of Play in Adulthood: A Dialogue with Joan Erikson". The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child. 53. doi:10.1080/00797308.1998.11822474.
  15. ^ a b "History". Austen Riggs Center. Retrieved 4 December 2014.
  16. ^ "Joan Erikson, Life Cycles Theorist, Dies". Harvard Gazette. September 11, 1997. Retrieved February 3, 2014.
  17. ^ L'intelligence collective à petite échelle (in French)
  18. ^ a b c Fleming, James. "Erikson's Psychosocial Developmental Stages". Psychological Perspectives on Human Development. Retrieved 7 October 2014.
  19. ^ a b Wexler, Alice (2009). Art and Disability. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 21–25. ISBN 9780230623934. Retrieved 7 October 2014.