1. Oral-sensory stage - ages 0 to 1½
2. Anal-muscular …show more content…
Maturity - age 50 and over
After watching "Walk The Line," the film about the life of singer Johnny Cash, it is easy to distinguish the psychosocial stages of Johnny Cash's life. There were a few stages left out of the film, but it is fairly simple to hypothesize about what occurred during those stages based on everything else the film shows. Just about every major turning point in Johnny Cash's life is depicted in the film, so it is safe to say that this is a good film to analyze. The first of the eight stages of psychosocial development, the oral-sensory stage, is not shown in the film. However, this is the stage where the child makes the trust-mistrust turn, and judging by Johnny Cash's personality in the rest of the film, his first stage went towards the "mistrust" side. His father never seemed to want to get close to him, so I would guess that he did the same thing during Johnny's first year or so. The distance between him and his father probably made Johnny less able to trust adults in his early …show more content…
This stage is when a child is supposed to develop their sense of responsibility. The child is also supposed to make a decision between narrow virtuosity and inertia. Johnny's decision is never really clear to me, but if I had to pick one, it would be narrow virtuosity. He spends a lot of time later in his life working to support himself and a family, and also trying to get his career going, which tells me that he always would rather work hard than be lazy. Johnny tries his best to make his father proud, but often does not succeed. He developed into a boy that was always day-dreaming, and leaned toward the artistic side of things. When he was 10 years old, his older brother, Jack, was killed in a wood-cutting accident, and Johnny never seemed to get over that, and always blamed himself for it because he left his brother alone. Immediately before Jack's death, Johnny's father asked him "where the hell have you been?!" Johnny made it to the hospital to be with his brother when he passed, but his father's words always haunted him, and gave him the feeling that his father blamed him for Jack's death. The fifth stage, adolescence, is also not really shown in the film, but we can assume that Johnny continued working on his musical talents and doing what most adolescents do, which is try to find their place in the world. Johnny was probably still dealing with