Blos1968 PDF
Blos1968 PDF
Blos1968 PDF
Peter Blos
To cite this article: Peter Blos (1968) Character Formation in Adolescence, The Psychoanalytic
Study of the Child, 23:1, 245-263, DOI: 10.1080/00797308.1968.11822958
Article views: 1
245
246 PETER BLOS
fense against phase-specific regression, but also the task of the analysis
to facilitate regression.
Adolescent regression not only is unavoidable, it is obligatory,
namely, phase specific. Adolescent regression in the service of de-
velopment brings the more advanced ego of adolescence into contact
with infantile drive positions, with old conflictual constellations and
their solutions, with early object relations and narcissistic formations.
We might say that the personality functioning which was adequate
for the child undergoes a selective overhaul. The ego's advanced re-
sourcefulness is brought to bear on this task.
In the course of adolescent psychic restructuring the ego draws
drive propensities and superego influences into its own realm, inte-
grating these disparate elements into, an adaptive pattern. The
process of the second individuation proceeds via regressive recathexis
of pregenital and preoedipal positions. They are, so to say, revisited,
lived through again, but with the difference that the adolescent ego,
being in a vastly more mature state vis-a-vis infantile drives and con-
flicts, is able to bring about shifts in the balance between ego and id.
New identifications ("the friend," "the group," etc.) take over super-
ego functions, episodically or lastingly. The adolescent's emotional
and physical withdrawal from, or opposition to, his world of child-
hood dependencies and security measures makes him, for some time,
seek a protective cover in passionate, but usually transient, peer asso-
ciations. We then observe shifting identifications with imitative and
restitutive connotations as expressed in posture, gait, gesture, attire,
speech, opinion, value system, etc. Their shifting and experimental
nature is a sign that character has not yet been formed, but it also
indicates that social adaptation has transcended the confines of the
family, its milieu and tradition. These social way stations, significant
as they are, have outlasted their usefulness with the unfolding and
implementation of a life plan, with the capacity for adult object
relations, and with a realistic projection of the self into the future.
Then we know that a consolidation of the personality has come
about, that a new forward step in internalization has been taken,
that inner consistencies and uniformities have become stabilized,
that behavior and attitudes have acquired an almost predictable
countenance, reliance, and harmony.
254 PETER BLOS
Residual Trauma
I shall now turn to the second precondition for adolescent char-
acter formation which will throw light on the function of character.
I hope to show that the character takes over homeostatic functions
from other regulatory agencies of childhood.' In this connection we
have to consider the effect of trauma on adolescent character forma-
tion. The usage of the term "trauma" in this paper corresponds with
Greenacre's (1967) definition. She writes: "In my own work I have
not limited my conception of trauma to sexual (genital) traumatic
events, or circumscribed episodes, but have included traumatic con-
ditions, i.e., any conditions which seem definitely unfavorable, nox-
ious, or drastically injurious to the 7!evelopment of the young indi-
vidual" (p. 128).
Clinical observation gave rise to the theoretical formulations that
follow. The analysis of older adolescents has demonstrated to me that
the resolution of the neurotic conflict, the weaning from infantile-
fantasies, will bring the analytic work to a good end, without, how-
ever, having eliminated all residues of the pathogenetic foundation
on which the illness rested. These residues remain recognizable in spe-
cial sensitivities to certain stimuli, external or internal, as well as in
affinities to, or avoidances of, experiences and fantasies, or in somatic
proclivities, despite the fact that all these aspects were dealt with
exhaustively in the analysis. By the end of the analysis, these residues
have lost their noxious valence due to ego and drive maturation. In
spite of this, they do require constant containment, which is to say,
they still are factors to be reckoned with in the maintenance of
psychic homeostasis. It is my contention that the automatization of
this containment process is identical with the function or, more pre-
cisely, with a part function of character. Such sensitizations to special
danger situations of a permanent traumatic valence are to be found,
for example, in object loss, passive dependency, loss of control, de-
cline of self-esteem, and other structurally and affectively injurious
conditions.
It is assumed here that trauma is a universal human condition
during infancy and early childhood, leaving, under the most favor-
r Again, I have to condense here what I have developed at greater length elsewhere
(1962, pp. 132-140).
CHARACTER FORMATION IN ADOLESCENCE 255
Ego Continuity
I now come to the third precondition for adolescent character
formation. Again, clinical observation has shown the direction and
cleared the path to a conceptual formulation. I have described cer-
tain cases of adolescent acting out in which the maladaptive behavior
represents an effort via action language to contradict a distortion of
the family history that was coercively, forced upon the child's mind.
I have designated such conditions as "family myth" (1963). It differs
from the classical family romance in that the distortion is forced on
the child from the outside, calling in question the validity of the
child's own perception. The study of a considerable number of such
cases has convinced me that adolescent development can be carried
CHARACTER FORMATION IN ADOLESCENCE 257
Sexual Identity
In order to complete the set of preconditions that promote ado-
lescent character formation, a fourth one has to be mentioned,
namely, t~~ emergence of sexual identity. While gender identity is
established at an early age, it has been my contention that sexual
identity with definitive, i.e., irreversible, boundaries appears only
belatedly as the collateral of sexual maturation at puberty. Before
physical sexual maturity is attained, the boundaries of sexual identity
remain fluid. Indeed, a shifting or ambiguous sexual identity, within
limits, is the rule rather than the exception. This is more apparent
in the girl than in the boy. I have only to remind you of the
acceptability, socially and personally, of the tomboy stage in the
girl and of the deep repression of breast envy in the preadolescent
boy. At any rate, puberty represents the demarcation line beyond
which bisexual admixtures to gender identity become incompatible
258 PETER BLOS
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Abraham, K. (1921), Contributions to the Theory of the Anal Character. In: Selected
Papers on Psycho-Analysis. London: Hogarth Press, 1927, pp. 370-392.
- - (1924), The Influence of Oral Erotism on Character-Formation. In: Selected
Papers on Psycho-Analysis. London: Hogarth Press, 1927, pp. 393-406.
- - (1925), Character-Formation on the Genital Level of Libido. In: Selected Papers
on Psycho-Analysis. London: Hogarth Press, 1927, pp. 407-417.
Bios, P. (1962), On Adolescence: A Psychoanalytic Iruer-pretation, New York: Free Press
of Glencoe.
- - (1963), The Concept of Acting Out in Relation to the Adolescent Process. T. Amer.
Acad. Child Psychiat., 2: 118-136.
- - (1967), The Second Individuation Process of Adolescence. This Annual, 22:162-186.
Erikson, E. H. (1946), Ego Development and Historical Change. This Annual, 2:359-396.
- - (1956), The Problem of Ego Identity. J. Amer. Psa. Assn., 4:56-121.
Fenichel, O. (1945), The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis. New York: Norton.
Freud, A. (1936), The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defense. New York: International
Universities Press, rev. ed., 1966.
- - (1958), Adolescence. This Annual, 13:255-278.
Freud, S. (1908), Character and Anal Erotism. Standard Edition, 9:167-175. London:
Hogarth Press, 1959.
- - (1913), The Disposition to Obsessional Neurosis. Standard Edition, 12:311-326.
London: Hogarth Press, 1958.
- - (1931), Libidinal Types. Standard Edition, 21:215-220. London: Hogarth Press,
1961.
- - (1939), Moses and Monotheism. Standard Edition, 23:3-137. London: Hogarth
Press, 1964.
Gitelson, M. (1948), Character Synthesis: The Psychotherapeutic Problem of Adoles-
cence. Amer. ]. Orthopsychiat., 18:422-431.
Glover, E. (1924), Notes on Oral Character Formation. In: On the Early Development
of Mind. New York: International Universities Press, 1956, pp. 25-46.
Greenacre, P. (1967), The Influence of Infantile Trauma on Genetic Patterns. In:
Psychic Trauma, ed. S. S. Furst. New York: Basic Books, pp. 108-153.
Hartmann, H. (1952), The Mutual Influences in the Development of Ego and Id. This
Annual, 7:9-30.
Inhelder, B. & Piaget, J. (1958), The Growth of Logical Thinking. New York: Basic
Books.
Jones, E. (1918), Anal-Erotic Character Traits. In: Papers on Psycho-Analysis. Balti-
more: Williams & Wilkins, 5th ed., 1948, pp. 413-437.
Lampl-de Groot, J. (1963), Symptom Formation and Character Formation. Int. ]. Psa.,
44:1-11.
Lichtenstein, H. (1965), Towards a Metapsychological Definition of the Concept of
Self. Int. ]. rs«, 46:117-128.
Reich, A. (1958), A Character Formation Representing the Integration of Unusual
Conflict Solutions into the Ego Structure. This Annual, 13:309-323.
CHARACTER FORMATION IN ADOLESCENCE 263
Reich, W. (1928), On Character Analysis. In: The Psychoanalytic Reader, ed. R. Fliess.
New York: International Universities Press, 1948, pp. 129-147.
- - (1929), The Genital Character and the Neurotic Character. In: The Psychoanalytic
Reader, ed. R. Fliess. New York: International Universities Press, 1948, pp. 148-169.
(1930), Character Formation and the Phobias of Childhood. In: The Psychoanaly-
tic Reader, ed. R. Fliess. New York: International Universities Press, 1948, pp.
170-182.
Zetzel, E. R. (1964), Symptom Formation and Character Formation. Int. ]. Psa., 45:151-
154.