Representing Autism: Culture, Narrative, Fascination

Front Cover
Liverpool University Press, Jan 1, 2008 - Literary Criticism - 236 pages
From concerns of an 'autism epidemic' to the MMR vaccine crisis, autism is a source of peculiar fascination in the contemporary media. Discussion of the condition has been largely framed within medicine, psychiatry and education but there has been no exploration of its power within
representative narrative forms. Representing Autism is the first book to tackle this approach, using contemporary fiction and memoir writing, film, photography, drama and documentary together with older texts to set the contemporary fascination with autism in context. Representing Autism analyses
and evaluates the place of autism within contemporary culture and at the same time examines the ideas of individual and community produced by people with autism themselves to establish the ideas of autistic presence that emerge from within a space of cognitive exceptionality. Central to the book is
a sense of the legitimacy of autistic presence as a way by which we might more fully articulate what it means to be human.
 

Contents

autism and narrative
1
autistic difference
27
Idiots and savants
65
Witnessing
104
Boys and girls men and women
139
families and sentiments
168
causingcuringcaring
207
Acknowledgements
214
Index
224
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About the author (2008)

Stuart Murray is senior lecturer in English at the University of Leeds. Since the diagnosis of his youngest son with autism in 2002 he has focused increasingly on disability studies.