Let me begin by saying this: No, I don’t believe every artistic genius is mad. Nor do I believe that every mad person is secretly (or not-so-secretly) artistic. Both are statistical outliers, the two do intersect occasionally in enormously interesting ways that I plan to talk about a lot, but they are not one and the same. There is no essential connection. A tendency that does seem to be increasing in frequency, however, and it’s a tendency I generally deplore, is the diagnosing of artists as a means of explaining their art. The process usually goes something like this: Sylvia Plath was consumed by the idea of killing herself, she was emotionally erratic, her moods were labile, she was occasionally full of rage, her interpersonal dynamics were complex, so she must have suffered from borderline personality disorder. “Shazam,” the interpreter declares, popping the champagne cork. “I have explained Sylvia Plath.” But a diagnosis is not an explanation. It is merely a description, a name for a set of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors, not a real answer. What we want to know is how someone became who she is, not what her DSM-derived “disease” might be. I talk a lot about this subject in chapter one of my Handbook of Psychobiography. You can check that out for more detail. Here’s a little illustration I use in my psychobiography courses. Say a mother tells a psychiatrist, “My son hears voices. Why?” The psychiatrist answers, “Well, sorry to say this, but it’s because he’s a schizophrenic.” Mom replies: “Oh. Well, how do you know he’s a schizophrenic?” Psychiatrist says, “Because he hears voices.” See how, in fact, we get nowhere?
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Diagnoses Often Get Us Nowhere
Comments
Great Blog
This blog really clarifies my confusion. Thanks Mr. Schultz, great insight as always. You deserve to make it big
Just like class...
....it makes things just click. It is one of my biggest pet peeves that people try and explain themselves or others through their diagnosis. I enjoy the fact that you look at all aspects to explain them!
Misdiagnosis of giftedness traits
Another issue is potential misdiagnosis of various sorts of perceived 'craziness' in artists, many of whom are gifted - in a technical, not merely popular, sense. In his article [on my site] Mis-Diagnosis and Dual Diagnosis of Gifted Children, James T. Webb, Ph.D. notes, "Many gifted and talented children (and adults) are being mis-diagnosed by psychologists, psychiatrists, pediatricians, and other health care professionals. The most common mis-diagnoses are: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Oppositional Defiant Disorder (OD), Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD), and Mood Disorders such as Cyclothymic Disorder, Dysthyinic Disorder, Depression, and Bi-Polar Disorder. These common mis-diagnoses stem from an ignorance among professionals about specific social and emotional characteristics of gifted children which are then mistakenly assumed by these professionals to be signs of pathology."
It describes a lot.. Thanks
It describes a lot..
Thanks for giving me the different experience..
I wish to follow some of the way you describe..
Thanks
-Nadal-
Dual Diagnosis
Dual Diagnosis
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Diagnoses Often Get Us Nowhere
Hello, Professor Schultz, this post reminded me of this -
http://moonsense.blogspot.com/2006/12/just-because-im-dead.html
About one researcher saddling Beethoven with Asperger's Syndrome.