POE,EDGAR,ALLAN - DRAWING THE LINE BETWEEN SELF-DESTRUCTIVE LIFE-STYLE AND ACTUAL SUICIDE

Authors
Citation
E. Shulman, POE,EDGAR,ALLAN - DRAWING THE LINE BETWEEN SELF-DESTRUCTIVE LIFE-STYLE AND ACTUAL SUICIDE, Omega, 34(1), 1996, pp. 29-69
Citations number
70
Categorie Soggetti
Psychology
Journal title
OmegaACNP
ISSN journal
00302228
Volume
34
Issue
1
Year of publication
1996
Pages
29 - 69
Database
ISI
SICI code
0030-2228(1996)34:1<29:P-DTLB>2.0.ZU;2-P
Abstract
Edgar Allan Poe, an alcoholic from age seventeen onward, died at age f orty. Besides his alcoholism, he was self-destructive in various other ways. He was constantly in debt, lived often in abject poverty, could not hold a job, feuded with the literary establishment and most other writers, lied and plagiarized, and usually changed residences at leas t once a year. Nevertheless, his ability to win the love and devotion of many women, especially his wife and mother-in-law, provided the bas is of his great achievements as writer, magazine editor, and literary critic, and his total commitment to American literature. Poe's history of bereavement, beginning with his mother's death when he was three, and his longing to join loved ones in the next world, help to support an interpretation of his death as neither disguised suicide nor an acc ident, but as death with a suicidal element.