Friday, September 17, 2004

...but bloggers live forever

I found this incredibly interesting. I got this from Netscape.com so long ago I can't remember when. I was going to send it out on my daily emails to my friends, but never got around to it. But it's not like lottery numbers or anything, so it's still fresh. Read on.
Poets die young. That's the word from a California study that surveyed death rates among novelists, playwrights, poets, and nonfiction writers in the United States, China, Turkey, and Eastern Europe and concluded that poets definitely died at a younger age than other types of writers, reports Reuters.

Why? Lead study author James Kaufman of the Learning Research Institute at California State University at San Bernardino says it could be because poets are tortured and prone to self-destruction. Or, it could be that many poets become famous at a young age, so their early deaths are noticed. "Among American, Chinese, and Turkish writers, poets died significantly younger than nonfiction writers," Kaufman wrote in the report published in the Journal of Death Studies. "Among the entire sample, poets died younger than both fiction writers and nonfiction writers."

The average lifespan for poets was 62 years, compared with 63 for playwrights, 66 for novelists, and 68 for nonfiction writers. Kaufman told Reuters that female poets were more likely than other types of writers to suffer from mental illness and be hospitalized, commit suicide, or attempt suicide. "I've dubbed this the 'Sylvia Plath Effect," he said. (Plath was a poet and novelist who committed suicide in 1963 at age 30.)

No comments:

Post a Comment