老化と老年医学ジャーナル

Traditional Approaches to Identity the Age

Erik Erikson

In discrepancy, a digressive perspective can show how, during commerce, we laboriously construct age-salient individualities for ourselves and others through talk. Conversational processes of age- identity operation are explored in a corpus of (United Kingdom) senior medical inpatient consultations. In different ways, croakers deny the age- applicability of medical troubles that their cases routinely plump. A well- developed identity is comprised of pretensions, values, and beliefs to which a person is committed. It's the mindfulness of the thickness in tone over time, the recognition of this thickness by others (Erikson, 1980). The process of identity development is both an individual and social miracle (Adams & Marshall, 1996). Important of this process is assumed during nonage when cognitive development allows for an individual to construct a ‘proposition of tone’ (Elkind, 1998) grounded on exposure to part models and identity options (Erikson, 1980). Erikson (1968) believed this period of development to be an ‘identity extremity, ’a pivotal turning point in which an existent must develop in one way or another, steering the adolescent toward growth and isolation. Identity is formed through a process of exploring options or choices and committing to an option grounded upon the outgrowth of their disquisition. Failure to establish a well- developed sense of identity can affect in identity confusion. Those passing identity confusion don't have a clear sense of who they're or their part in society.

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