Previous research indicates a correlation between creativity and psychopathology, particularly among female authors and poets, possibly heightening this group’s risk for suicide. This article aims to provide a psychohistory containing psychological evaluations and hypothetical treatments plans for two prominent female writers, Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf both of whom completed suicide. Primary source material such as Plath’s journals, Woolf’s diaries, and related autobiographies were used as supplemental data for the clinical assessment. Plath is argued to have hypothetically met today’s DSM-5 criteria for Major Depressive Disorder, and Woolf for Bipolar I Disorder in addition to trauma-related difficulties
More than 1,000 college students die by suicide each year. Commonly found among these suicides are s...
The purpose of this research was to find the depression symptoms of Virginia Woolf as the author por...
Abstract only availableSuicide is central in Sylvia Plath's late poems as well as her novel The Bell...
An interdisciplinary exploration of the links between genius and madness, madness and gender, an...
Using Sylvia Plath\u27s novel, The Bell Jar, student applies the DSM-IV-TR to provide a diagnosis
The authors offer an analysis of mental illness in the work of a key twentieth century author: Virgi...
Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath are two well-known women writers of the twentieth century who commit...
Virginia Woolf is an author still known today for her work in using literature as a vehicle for unde...
This article describes death ideas which occur in Sylvia Plath’s selected poems entitled “Full Fatho...
Psychoanalyst Douglass Orr declares that his book about Virginia Woolf is not a psychobiography. I...
The belief that creativity and madness are interrelated has endured across the centuries. Artists, p...
Family history and traumatic experiences are factors linked to bipolar disorder. It is known that th...
Sylvia Plath is a poet and author praised for her works discussing mental health and familial trauma...
The reputation of British writer Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) is now well established. Her brilliance ...
Abstract: Since ancient philosophy extraordinary creativity is associated with mental disorders, emo...
More than 1,000 college students die by suicide each year. Commonly found among these suicides are s...
The purpose of this research was to find the depression symptoms of Virginia Woolf as the author por...
Abstract only availableSuicide is central in Sylvia Plath's late poems as well as her novel The Bell...
An interdisciplinary exploration of the links between genius and madness, madness and gender, an...
Using Sylvia Plath\u27s novel, The Bell Jar, student applies the DSM-IV-TR to provide a diagnosis
The authors offer an analysis of mental illness in the work of a key twentieth century author: Virgi...
Virginia Woolf and Sylvia Plath are two well-known women writers of the twentieth century who commit...
Virginia Woolf is an author still known today for her work in using literature as a vehicle for unde...
This article describes death ideas which occur in Sylvia Plath’s selected poems entitled “Full Fatho...
Psychoanalyst Douglass Orr declares that his book about Virginia Woolf is not a psychobiography. I...
The belief that creativity and madness are interrelated has endured across the centuries. Artists, p...
Family history and traumatic experiences are factors linked to bipolar disorder. It is known that th...
Sylvia Plath is a poet and author praised for her works discussing mental health and familial trauma...
The reputation of British writer Virginia Woolf (1882-1941) is now well established. Her brilliance ...
Abstract: Since ancient philosophy extraordinary creativity is associated with mental disorders, emo...
More than 1,000 college students die by suicide each year. Commonly found among these suicides are s...
The purpose of this research was to find the depression symptoms of Virginia Woolf as the author por...
Abstract only availableSuicide is central in Sylvia Plath's late poems as well as her novel The Bell...