Constructing Autism


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Constructing Autism


Constructing Autism

Author: Majia Holmer Nadesan

language: en

Publisher: Routledge

Release Date: 2013-09-05


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Autism is now considered to be one of the most common developmental disorders today, yet 100 years ago the term did not exist. This book examines the historical and social events that enabled autism to be identified as a distinct disorder in the early twentieth century. The author, herself the mother of an autistic child, argues that although there is without doubt a biogenetic component to the condition, it is the social factors involved in its identification, interpretation and remediation that determine what it means to be autistic. Constructing Autism explores the social practices and institutions that reflect and shape the way we think about autism and what effects this has on autistic people and their families. Unravelling what appears to be the ‘truth’ about autism, this informative book steps behind the history of its emergence as a modern disorder to see how it has become a crisis of twenty-first century child development.

Constructing Autism


Constructing Autism

Author: Majia Holmer Nadesan

language: en

Publisher: Psychology Press

Release Date: 2005


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This book examines the historical and social events that enabled autism to be identified as a distinct disorder in the early twentieth century.

The Social, Cultural, and Political Discourses of Autism


The Social, Cultural, and Political Discourses of Autism

Author: Jessica Nina Lester

language: en

Publisher: Springer Nature

Release Date: 2021-11-13


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Taking up a social constructionist position, this book illustrates the social and cultural construction of autism as made visible in everyday, educational, institutional and historical discourses, alongside a careful consideration of the bodily and material realities of embodied differences. The authors highlight the economic consequences of a disabling culture, and explore how autism fits within broader arguments related to normality, abnormality and stigma. To do this, they provide a theoretically and historically grounded discussion of autism—one designed to layer and complicate the discussions that surround autism and disability in schools, health clinics, and society writ large. In addition, they locate this discussion across two contexts – the US and the UK – and draw upon empirical examples to illustrate the key points. Located at the intersection of critical disability studies and discourse studies, the book offers a critical reframing of autism and childhood mental health disorders more generally.