Literature DB >> 19528032

Autistic autobiography.

Ian Hacking1.   

Abstract

Autism narratives are not just stories or histories, describing a given reality. They are creating the language in which to describe the experience of autism, and hence helping to forge the concepts in which to think autism. This paper focuses on a series of autobiographies that began with Grandin's Emergence. These are often said to show us autism from the 'inside'. The paper proposes that instead they are developing ways to describe experience for which there is little pre-existing language. Wittgenstein has many well-known aphorisms about how we understand other people directly, without inference. They condense what he had found in Wolfgang Köhler's Gestalt Psychology. These phenomena of direct understanding what other people are doing are, Köhler wrote, 'the common property and practice of mankind'. They are not the common property and practice of people with autism. Ordinary language is rich in age-old ways to describe what others are thinking, feeling and so forth. Köhler's phenomena are the bedrock on which such language rests. There is no such discourse for autism, because Köhler's phenomena are absent. But a new discourse is being made up right now, i.e. ways of talking for which the autobiographies serve as working prototypes.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19528032      PMCID: PMC2677587          DOI: 10.1098/rstb.2008.0329

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8436            Impact factor:   6.237


  2 in total

Review 1.  Talent in autism: hyper-systemizing, hyper-attention to detail and sensory hypersensitivity.

Authors:  Simon Baron-Cohen; Emma Ashwin; Chris Ashwin; Teresa Tavassoli; Bhismadev Chakrabarti
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2009-05-27       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Beliefs about beliefs: representation and constraining function of wrong beliefs in young children's understanding of deception.

Authors:  H Wimmer; J Perner
Journal:  Cognition       Date:  1983-01
  2 in total
  10 in total

1.  The beautiful otherness of the autistic mind.

Authors:  Francesca Happé; Uta Frith
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2009-05-27       Impact factor: 6.237

2.  Toward a Phenomenological Account of Embodied Subjectivity in Autism.

Authors:  Sofie Boldsen
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2018-12

3.  Human capabilities, mild autism, deafness and the morality of embryo selection.

Authors:  Pier Jaarsma; Stellan Welin
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2013-11

4.  "And I look down and he is gone": narrating autism, elopement and wandering in Los Angeles.

Authors:  Olga Solomon; Mary C Lawlor
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2013-07-05       Impact factor: 4.634

5.  Asperger's Syndrome, Subjectivity and the Senses.

Authors:  Ellen Badone; David Nicholas; Wendy Roberts; Peter Kien
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2016-09

6.  Psychotherapy in historical perspective.

Authors:  Sarah Marks
Journal:  Hist Human Sci       Date:  2017-04-20       Impact factor: 0.690

7.  Expanding boundaries in psychiatry: uncertainty in the context of diagnosis-seeking and negotiation.

Authors:  Rhiannon Lane
Journal:  Sociol Health Illn       Date:  2019-12-17

8.  Embodiment and sense-making in autism.

Authors:  Hanne De Jaegher
Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2013-03-26

9.  Autism trait prevalence in treatment seeking adolescents and adults attending specialist gender services.

Authors:  Katrin Lehmann; Michael Rosato; Hugh McKenna; Gerard Leavey
Journal:  Eur Psychiatry       Date:  2020-03-02       Impact factor: 5.361

10.  'It just opens up their world': autism, empathy, and the therapeutic effects of equine interactions.

Authors:  Roslyn Malcolm; Stefan Ecks; Martyn Pickersgill
Journal:  Anthropol Med       Date:  2017-05-17
  10 in total

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