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oa Erik H. Erikson, Young Man Luther: A Study in Psychoanalysis and History (1958)
A Psychosocial Interpretation of Luther and its Relevance for Understanding Religious Identity Formation Today
- Amsterdam University Press
- Source: NTT Journal for Theology and the Study of Religion, Volume 76, Issue 1, Jan 2022, p. 61 - 75
Abstract
As part of NTT JTSR’s series on Key Texts, the present article discusses Erik H. Erikson’s interdisciplinary, psychohistorical study of the young Martin Luther, its reception, and its relevance for today. Erikson showed how Luther’s own identity crisis – emerging from the troubled relationship with his father – converged with a crisis in late medieval society and theology, and how being a talented homo religiosus helped Luther to solve both crises at the same time, presenting a “religiosity for the adult man” in accordance with the Renaissance need for autonomy. It is argued that during his psychosocial study of Luther and the latter’s cultural context, Erikson developed a general, existential theory of religion that is also relevant for an understanding of the search for identity and religion in modern times.