Moving Through a Textual Space Autistically.

J Med Humanit

Department of English, School of Language, Literature, Music, and Visual Culture, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, AB24 3FX.

Published: March 2024

This article is an investigation of neurodivergent reading practices. It is a collectively written paper where the focus is as much on an autoethnographic exploration of our autistic readings of autism/autistic fiction as it is on the read texts themselves. The reading experiences described come primarily from Yoon Ha Lee's Dragon Pearl (2019) and Dahlia Donovan's The Grasmere Cottage Mystery (2018), which we experience as opposite each other in how they depict their neurodivergent characters and speak to us as autistic readers. Through the article, we describe a formation of neurodivergent (critical) collective readings of autism/autistic fiction. The article contributes to an academic and activistic discourse around neurodivergent reader responses and power relations between neurodivergent and neurotypical readers and authors.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10890973PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10912-023-09797-yDOI Listing

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Moving Through a Textual Space Autistically.

J Med Humanit

March 2024

Department of English, School of Language, Literature, Music, and Visual Culture, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland, AB24 3FX.

This article is an investigation of neurodivergent reading practices. It is a collectively written paper where the focus is as much on an autoethnographic exploration of our autistic readings of autism/autistic fiction as it is on the read texts themselves. The reading experiences described come primarily from Yoon Ha Lee's Dragon Pearl (2019) and Dahlia Donovan's The Grasmere Cottage Mystery (2018), which we experience as opposite each other in how they depict their neurodivergent characters and speak to us as autistic readers.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The siblings and parents of 35 children with infantile autism/autistic disorder were compared with those of children with deficits in attention, motor control and perception (DAMP) and of normal children for reported speech and language problems, reading and spelling problems, social deficits and psychiatric disorders. Children with autism tended more often to be the first and only child and there was some support for genetic stoppage in this group. Learning disorders were equally common among siblings and parents of the autism and normal groups, but less common compared with the DAMP group.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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