Abstract
Robert Burns has long been recognised as someone who experienced episodes of melancholia, but no detailed, systematic and objective assessment of his mental health has been undertaken. We tested a novel methodology, combining psychiatric and literary approaches, to assess the feasibility of using Burns’s extensive personal correspondence as a source of evidence for assessing the presence of symptoms of a clinically significant mood disorder. We confirmed the potential of this approach and identified putative evidence of episodes of depression and hypomania within the correspondence. While not conclusive of a formal diagnosis of bipolar disorder, this work highlights a need for further systematic examination of Burns’s mental health and how this may have influenced his work.
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Hansen, M., Smith, D. J., & Carruthers, G. (2018). Mood disorder in the personal correspondence of Robert Burns: Testing a novel interdisciplinary approach. Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, 48(2), 165–174. https://doi.org/10.4997/JRCPE.2018.212
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