Blogs and Stories
Is There a Suicide Gene?
Depression and bipolar disorder may be in your DNA—but is suicide? Several high-profile families have been plagued by the phenomenon. Casey Schwartz investigates.
The news on Monday that Sylvia Plath’s son, Nicholas Hughes, had killed himself, reopened a macabre chapter of literary history. Obituaries revealed spare and suggestive details. Hughes, the son of the poet Ted Hughes, lived in Alaska and worked as a biologist, studying the travel patterns of fish. Recently, however, he had left his job to focus on pottery making. Hughes was still an infant when his mother committed suicide in 1963 by putting her head in a gas oven; he was seven when his father’s second wife, Assia Wevill, killed herself (and her four-year-old daughter) by exactly the same means. And 40 years later, on March 16, 2009, Hughes took his own life, hanging himself in his Alaska home.
It is difficult to imagine what gravitational force in Ted Hughes’ unlucky orbit could explain this protracted pattern. But it is clear that suicide can run in families.
A study in the Archives of General Psychiatry found that children whose parents had attempted suicide were six times as likely to try taking their own lives.
There are other famous examples, including the spectacularly disastrous fate of the Hemingway family—beginning with the suicide of Ernest Hemingway’s father, Clarence, continuing to Ernest Hemingway’s own final gunshot, the suicide of his two siblings Ursula and Leicester, and, two generations later, that of his granddaughter, the actress Margaux Hemingway.
A recent biography of the philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein describes an equally tragic family history. Three of his brothers committed suicide, two of his sisters married men who went mad, one of whom, in keeping with family tradition, eventually killed himself. Ludwig himself struggled with suicidal thoughts; as did his one surviving brother, a renowned pianist even after he lost one of his arms in World War I.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning writer J. Anthony Lukas, the author of Common Ground, who hanged himself with a bathrobe sash in 1997, also had a family history of suicide. His mother, an actress, took her own life with a razor blade when he was eight years old.
There is more than just anecdotal evidence behind the claim that the suicide of one family member increases the chance that other family members will attempt suicide, or successfully carry it out. A study in the Archives of General Psychiatry published in 2002 found that children whose parents had attempted suicide were six times as likely to try taking their own lives. Twin and adoption studies have revealed that a disposition toward suicidal behavior is partially heritable. Researchers have scrutinized the phenomenon, struggling to untangle the psychological factors from the genetic.
Of course, suicide is closely associated with a number of psychiatric conditions, such as depression and bipolar disorder, which have well-established genetic links. But studies have shown that suicide can be independently inherited.
“We grow up and we learn how to be by either imitating or negating our parents,” says Dr. T. Byram Karasu, university chairman and professor at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine at Yeshiva University. “So if you identify with one parent who happened to be suicidal, you may end up having suicidal ideation even though you’re not depressed. It becomes like a norm.”
According to Karasu, a parent’s suicide can provide a model of how one deals with life—a lethal example for children who have also inherited that parent’s biological predisposition. Of course, the psychological legacy is all but impossible to quantify.








IT DOES SEEM, THERE'S A SUICIDE GENE, IN SOME FAMILIES, I THINK THERE WERE MAYBE THREE, IN EARNEST HEMINGWAY, FAMILY
I WENT BACK AND FINISHED THAT STORY, I DIDN'T KNOW THERE SO MANT TRADGEDIES, IN THAT FAMILY, I LOVED ERNEST HEMINGWAYS BOOKS
My mother loved Sylvia Plath and particularly Plath's poem "Daddy." She was devastated when she committed suiced. If there is a gene, it needs to be eradicated. It is interesting that a common denominator in Plath, the next wife -Wevill (unrelated) and Plath's son, Nicholas Hughes, all had Ted Hughes in their lives. Something about the environment, the people you are around (particularly your loved ones), self esteem or lifestyle?
Also, what gene do people who don't kill themselves but are awful monsters (like Fritzl) have? Then there is his daughter and her children. The surely do defy any most horrid, dark situation one can be subjected to ever and they didn't do it..
This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.
sad story. but suicide gene? Not very likely. what is likely is that tendency towards depression is very likely inherited, and thus untreated or ill-treated may lead to suicide. lets not be reductive.
Or perhaps it's just that we ALL feel like suicide sometimes - but once someone in a family succeeds, the taboo is broken, and other members feel less constrained?
I don't think suicide runs in families genetically. I do believe, however, that it is psychologically infectious. Once a member of a family unit commits the act, it is forever now a part of the network of kin's narrative. It becomes a possibility for each and every member by virtue of it's ultimate finality.
Why do we see everything in terms of genetics? Why are we so quick to negate the possibility of Will? Personal responsibility? The existentiality of Life? Why can't we, as liberals, as centrists, look more to psychology and morality?
I don't know, as with alcoholism or philandering, I think it's more a matter of role models than genetics. I don't believe behavior is transmitted genetically. Propensities, perhaps. But behavior is learned by watching models, though one can choose to repeat or avoid the behavior being modeled. I think if you grow up in a family where drinking, domestic violence, cheating or suicide is common, you will see that at least SOME people choose to "solve" their problems in these ways. Whether you agree with their idea of a solution is up to you.
Whether it's role models, genetics, or something else that causes it, I DO know that depression is an incredibly dark, hopeless place and people most often are not able to take action to help themselves. If you know someone who is trapped in this horrible illness, please do reach out.
Having a parent kill themselves will naturally make a kid more likely to be suicidal, and I think that genetics has little to do with it.
Even if there is a gene or a group of genes that make people prone to depression and suicide, those genes are probably also involved in profound creativity. The brilliance of the world's Plaths and Hemmingways is inextricably coupled with a deeply melancholic nature.
This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.
This user is no longer registered.
This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.
But it could also be learned behavior. You tend to repeat as an adult what you saw your parents behavior al a child. What is hereditary is the depression .
Wesbri
Lost a brother who seemed to have much to live for to suicide by hanging. He left a widow, two children, two parents and three siblings confused. I engaged a therapist to explore and learn, but especially to evaluate my own risk after reading that onece a suicide happens in a family a repeat is 400% more likely. I have been seriously tested in my own life and never once thought of suicide as a solution, yet I might share those genes.
Mental illness is the common explanation that satisfies most, but many who are very seriously mentally ill or have little to live for don't kill themselves. It's way too complex and interlocked with life to pin to a single cause, I believe that suicide is often a brief convergence of many factors, including physical and mental health, social health and most importantly having a strong reason to live.
The best prevention is to stop hiding it behind shame and talk about it more.
>>If there is a gene, it needs to be eradicated.
My great-grandfather killed himself. While serious depression and subsequent self-destructive acts have abounded in my family, there have been no other suicides.
The genetic links for depression and other mental disorders cannot be disputed. A genetic link for suicide is still open to debate.
There is no presonal responsibility when a person committs suicide. In those extremely rare condition where suicide is a response to a long-term, incurable and excruciatingly painful disease, an exception for personal responsibility can be made. In the majority of cases, however, the person is too mentally ill to have authentic responsibility for his choices. Suicide is almost always the result of overwhelming emotional distress. Who among us behaves responsibly when we are overwhelmed with traumatic emotional turmoil?
The author forgot to mention renowned monologist Spalding Gray, who wrote a book in which he grapples with his mother's suicide, and somewhat built a career around that life-changing (for him) event, until he jumped off the Staten Island Ferry a few years back. See "Monster In A Box", "Swimming to Cambodia and "The Terrors of Pleasure" if you can still find them on DVD.
What kind of mumbo jumbo is this?
This post by Ms. Schwartz has all the earmarks of a highschool assignment paper.
Why is this kind of regrettable fluff ever posted on a Tina Brown media vehicle.
Over at Mr. Buckley's, "susurrus" is the word of the day.
The Daily Beast is beginning to look and sound like an idiotic amateur hour shameless parade.
I doubt suicide is genetic, but I do know that when a parent commits suicide there is a tremendous pull to follow suit.Back in the 60's mental illness was much more stigmatized and survivors of suicide veritably wore a scarlet S. Few child survivors received help and support. It compounds the original pain and makes it very difficult to live out your natural life.
An excellent article. It's a subject that needs more coverage. Here's one I wrote that follows the same line -
The legacy of Suicide http://www.butlerreport.com/Opinion/BREd_suic.html
OMG! The Butler Report is written by pedophiles. (At least, that's what I heard.) Butt. Leer. You take it from there. Anywho, anyone who commits suicide is doing us a favor. My guess is, if you have known any of these people, it's whine, whine, whine, boo, hoo, hoo, ooh I want to kill myself. Let them do it. They are weak and boring. If your mom killed herself, and you are still whining about it, do us all a service and turn the gas on.
Actually, Hughes never married Assia Wevill. His first wife was Sylvia Plath; his second and last wife was Carol Orchard.
Although the titillation of limiting ourselves to as few choices as possible, to catagorize and standardize well past much regard for the absolute reality of our snowflake selves (no two alike), the wholehearted socio-cultural nature vs nurture (genes vs anything else) argument confounds me. Each time we looked into an atom to find the end(?), answer(?) or absolute, we've been met with another beginning, question and variable.
My vote goes to brain chemistry that forms between the ages of 0 and 5. The unique experiences of every one of us, combined with the number of times certain experiences repeat (making big ol' brain groves we can hardly help but tumble into) themselves, the caregiver participating in these experiences as well as the quality and amount of encouragement, discouragement, self-image, etc., etc., determines our likely future behavior more accurately than boxes and breakdowns.
It's tragic and discouraging how many people refuse to believe behavior has a genetic component. This has been manifestly proved by studies of identical twins reared together and apart. Fraternal twins are far less similar than identical ones, despite being raised in the same environment.And identical twins raised by entirely different families remain startlingly alike. This has been proved over and over again. Depression and a tendency to suicide run in biological families, but not adoptive ones. The same is true of every other behavior from smoking, to alcoholism, altruism and obesity. Quit relying on your "gut" to tell you if it's nature or nurture. It's both, but nature has the power to trump nurture.Look to science.
Thank you.
As a first time user, your comment has been submitted for review. It can take anywhere from a few hours to a day or two for your comment to be reviewed, depending on the time of week and the volume of comments we receive.
Please log in to leave comments.