Literature DB >> 8733792

Verbal creativity, depression and alcoholism. An investigation of one hundred American and British writers.

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: An earlier study of 291 world famous men had shown that only visual artists and creative writers were characterised, in comparison with the general population, by a much higher prevalence of pathological personality traits and alcoholism. Depressive disorders, but not any other psychiatric conditions, had afflicted writers almost twice as often as men with other high creative achievements. The present investigation was undertaken to confirm these findings in a larger and more comprehensive series of writers, and to discover causal factors for confirmed high prevalences of affective conditions and alcoholism in writers.
METHOD: Data were collected from post-mortem biographies and, where applicable, translated into DSM diagnoses. The frequencies of various abnormalities and deviations were compared between poets, prose fiction writers, and playwrights.
RESULTS: A high prevalence in writers of affective conditions and of alcoholism was confirmed. That of bipolar affective psychoses exceeded population norms in poets, who in spite of this had a lower prevalence of all kinds of affective disorders, of alcoholism, of personality deviations, and related to this, of psychosexual and marital problems, than prose fiction and play writers.
CONCLUSIONS: A hypothesis is developed, which links the greater frequency of affective illnesses and alcoholism in playwrights and prose writers, in comparison with poets, to differences in the nature and intensity of their emotional imagination. This hypothesis could be tested by clinical psychologists collaborating with experts in literature on random samples of different kinds of writers.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8733792     DOI: 10.1192/bjp.168.5.545

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0007-1250            Impact factor:   9.319


  8 in total

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2.  Relating schizotypy and personality to the phenomenology of creativity.

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3.  From recreational to functional drug use: the evolution of drugs in American higher education, 1960-2014.

Authors:  Ross D Aikins
Journal:  Hist Educ       Date:  2014-12-17

4.  The cognitive neuroscience of creativity.

Authors:  Arne Dietrich
Journal:  Psychon Bull Rev       Date:  2004-12

5.  Thinking outside a less intact box: thalamic dopamine D2 receptor densities are negatively related to psychometric creativity in healthy individuals.

Authors:  Orjan de Manzano; Simon Cervenka; Anke Karabanov; Lars Farde; Fredrik Ullén
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-05-17       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Familial linkage between neuropsychiatric disorders and intellectual interests.

Authors:  Benjamin C Campbell; Samuel S-H Wang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-01-26       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  The touch of madness:manto as a psychiatric case study.

Authors:  Ali M Hashmi; Muhammad Awais Aftab
Journal:  Pak J Med Sci       Date:  2013-09       Impact factor: 1.088

Review 8.  Creativity and psychopathology: Two sides of the same coin?

Authors:  Indla Ramasubba Reddy; Jateen Ukrani; Vishal Indla; Varsha Ukrani
Journal:  Indian J Psychiatry       Date:  2018 Apr-Jun       Impact factor: 1.759

  8 in total

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