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The Sylvia Plath effect: Mental illness in eminent creative writers

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CONTRIBUTORS:
  Author Kaufman, James C (California State University San Bernardino)
JOURNAL:
  The Journal of creative behavior, 35(1), 37 - 50.
YEAR: 2001
PUB TYPE: Journal Article
SUBJECT(S): None
DISCIPLINE: Psychology
HTTP:
LANGUAGE: English
PUB ID: 103-383-460 (Last edited on 2004/01/09 14:07:40 US/Mountain)
SPONSOR(S):
 
ABSTRACT:
Although many studies (e.g., N. C. Andreasen, 1987; K. R. Jamison, 1989; A. M. Ludwig, 1995) have demonstrated that creative writers are prone to suffer from mental illness, this relationship has not been truly examined in depth. Is this finding true of all writers? In Study One, 1,629 writers were analyzed for signs of mental illness. Female poets were found to be significantly more likely to suffer from mental illness than female fiction writers or male writers of any type. Study two extended the analysis to 520 eminent women (poets, fiction writers, non-fiction writers, visual artists, politicians, and actresses), and again found the poets to be significantly more likely to experience mental illness. This early finding has been dubbed "the Sylvia Plath effect," and implications and possibilities for future research are discussed
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