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Journal Article

Citation

Dean HJ, Boyd RL. J. Affect. Disord. 2020; 266: 482-491.

Affiliation

Lancaster University, United Kingdom. Electronic address: r.boyd@lancaster.ac.uk.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jad.2020.01.098

PMID

32056916

Abstract

BACKGROUND: To help shed light on the peculiar circumstances surrounding the death of the famed macabre and mystery writer, poet, editor, and literary critic, we explored the potential role of depression in the life and death of Edgar Allan Poe via his written language.

METHOD: Using computerized language analysis, we analyzed works from Poe's corpora of personal letters (N = 309), poems (N = 49), and short stories (N = 63), and investigated whether a pattern of linguistic cues consistent with depression and suicidal cognition were discernible throughout the writer's life, particularly in his final years. Building on past work, language scores were collapsed into a composite depression metric for each text. Data from each work type was subsequently compiled and graphed into a single plot by year, with scores exceeding the 95th percentile (p < 0.05) considered statistically significant and treated as potential depressive episodes.

RESULTS: Significant, consistent patterns of depression were not found and do not support suicide as a cause of death. However, linguistic evidence was found suggesting the presence of several potential depressive episodes over the course of Poe's life - these episodes were the most pronounced during years of Poe's greatest success, as well as those following the death of his late wife. LIMITATIONS: Given the sampling method, it is not possible to establish direct causality; results should be considered informed but tentative.

CONCLUSION: This investigation demonstrates the utility of language analysis for capturing disruptive/maladaptive emotional responses to life events.

Copyright © 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Depression; Digital humanities; Edgar Allan Poe; LIWC; Suicide

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