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Gandhi's Truth

Erikson's 1969 <em>psychobiography of Mahatma Gandhi</em> — winner of the Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award — which examined Gandhi's midlife generativity crisis and the method of nonviolent resistance that emerged from it.
Gandhi's Truth: On the Origins of Militant Nonviolence (W.W. Norton, 1969) is Erikson's second major psychobiographical work and the companion volume to Young Man Luther. Where the Luther book addressed the identity crisis of youth, the Gandhi book addressed the generativity crisis of midlife. Erikson focused on Gandhi's 1918 Ahmedabad textile workers' strike — the event where the adult Gandhi forged satyagraha, the method of nonviolent direct action, out of the convergence of his personal development and the political demands of colonial India. The book's central insight, directly relevant to the AI-era generativity crisis, is that Gandhi's generative contribution was not a fixed body of expertise but a way of being — a quality of engagement with difficulty that his followers absorbed through relationship rather than instruction.

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The book won the 1970 Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction and the National Book Award — the highest honors an American nonfiction work can receive. It demonstrated that Erikson's developmental

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