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Reviewed by: Johansson M, PsyD

Margaret Mitchell : ESTJ or ISTJ or XXXX?

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Know your Type in Four simple questions

Question 1 of 4 – What can you relate to the most?
Are involved in what is happening outside and around them
Are immersed in own world of thoughts and feelings
Question 2 of 4 – What can you relate to the most?
Wonder mostly about the past or the future
See everyone and sense everything

Question 3 of 4 – What can you relate to the most?

You connect deeply with others, sharing their joys and sorrows as your own. You share your feelings freely, fostering connection.


You approach the world with logic and reason, seeking clarity and understanding. You focus on facts and enjoy dissecting puzzles and historical events.

Question 4 of 4 – What can you relate to the most?
Plan ahead but act impulsively following the situation
Plan a schedule ahead and tend to follow it

Summary


MBTI description and physical appearance

Enneagram Type:

Under renovation.

Related Celebrities: Dual Partners

Likely conflicting partners

Name Margaret Mitchell
Profession Novelist
Date of Birth 1900-11-08
Place of Birth Atlanta, GA
Age 48 yrs
Death Date 1949-08-16
Birth Sign Scorpio

About Margaret Mitchell

Author of the bestselling novel, Gone with the Wind, which received both a National Book Award and a Pulitzer Prize. The novel was adapted into a critically acclaimed, 1939 film starring Vivien Leigh as Scarlett O Hara and Clark Gable as Rhett Butler.

Margaret Mitchell

After Mitchell s dress caught on fire when she was three years old, her mother started dressing her in boys pants, earning her the nickname of Jimmy (based on Little Jimmy, a popular comic strip of the time). She wrote a novella called Lost Laysen during her adolescent years; the work was published nearly a century later.

Knowledge Base

She only had one book published while she was alive, but that work alone won her the 1937 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

She grew up in Atlanta, Georgia as the daughter of suffragist Mary Isabel Stephens and attorney Eugene Muse Mitchell. She was briefly married to Berrien K. Upshaw before meeting John R. Marsh, the man who would become second husband. She had no children.

Her writing was heavily influenced by the work of one of her favorite authors, Charles Dickens.

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