Full shell-model diagonalization has been performed to study the structure of
neutron-rich nuclei around 20C. We investigate in detail the roles played
by the different monopole components of the effective interaction in the
evolution of the N=14 shell in C, N and O isotopes. It is found that the
relevant neutron-neutron monopole terms, Vd5/2d5/2nn and
Vs1/2s1/2nn, contribute significantly to the reduction of the
N=14 shell gap in C and N isotopes in comparison with that in O isotopes. The
origin of this unexpectedly large effect, which is comparable with (sometimes
even larger than) that caused by the proton-neutron interaction, is related to
the enhanced configuration mixing in those nuclei due to many-body
correlations. Such a scheme is also supported by the large B(E2) value in the
nucleus 20C which has been measured recently