Female psychopath
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'''Female psychopaths''' are considered a rarity, and the nature of [[psychopathy]] has been researched as being a male quality. An influential paper in this respect, which argues that the female psychopath has not been given enough credibility, has been "[[The Last Frontier: Myths & the Female Psychopathic Killer]]" (2010) by Perri and Lichtenwald. | '''Female psychopaths''' are considered a rarity, and the nature of [[psychopathy]] has been researched as being a male quality. An influential paper in this respect, which argues that the female psychopath has not been given enough credibility, has been "[[The Last Frontier: Myths & the Female Psychopathic Killer]]" (2010) by Perri and Lichtenwald. | ||
==Statistics== | ==Statistics== | ||
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A 2009 study by Coid et al. of a representative sample of British prisoners, unlike selected samples used in many other studies, found a prevalence of PCL-R > 30 in 7.7% of men and in 1.9% of women. | A 2009 study by Coid et al. of a representative sample of British prisoners, unlike selected samples used in many other studies, found a prevalence of PCL-R > 30 in 7.7% of men and in 1.9% of women. | ||
==Cleckley== | ==Cleckley== |
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Female psychopaths are considered a rarity, and the nature of psychopathy has been researched as being a male quality. An influential paper in this respect, which argues that the female psychopath has not been given enough credibility, has been "The Last Frontier: Myths & the Female Psychopathic Killer" (2010) by Perri and Lichtenwald.
Statistics
A 2009 study by Coid et al. of a representative sample of British prisoners, unlike selected samples used in many other studies, found a prevalence of PCL-R > 30 in 7.7% of men and in 1.9% of women.
Cleckley
The 1941 book The Mask of Sanity by Hervey M. Cleckley has at least one account of a female psychopath, called Anna of whose intelligence Clekley says:
- "More specific inquiry brought out opinions on Hamlet's essential conflict, comparison between the music of Brahms and the music of Shostakovitch, an impressive criticism of Schopenhauer's views on women, and several pertinent references to The Brothers Karamazov."
Perri and Lichtenwald argue that Cleckley was blinded by cultural myths about male aggression and female innocence, and thus tended to overlook or minimize psychopathic behaviors in women.
See also