All thanks to the famous case of Sybil, multiple personality disorder (MPD)--today called dissociative identity disorder (DID)--is officially listed in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. But did Sybil, whose real name was Shirley Mason, really have sixteen different personalities?
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Shirley Mason, more famously known as "Sybil" |
Debbie Nathan doesn't think so. In her recent book Sybil Exposed, Nathan investigates the three women behind the Sybil pop phenomenon and psychotherapy revolution. As the description on Amazon advertises,
"Nathan reveals what really powered the legend: a trio of women—the willing patient, her ambitious shrink, and the imaginative journalist who spun their story into bestseller gold."
"I think [MPD] is a cultural artifact for right now. People feel it deeply. I think it has done mischief to the culture, particularly for women. . . . We have to think of ourselves as separate selves, separate beings in order to do the things we want to do. There's the sexy me, and then there's the me that knows how to make bookcases with the hammer and nails, and there's the me that knows how to cook. I think these are reified ways of thinking about women, and I think they come about because we are conflicted about our roles."