Sociological and cultural aspects of autism

Sociological and cultural aspects of autism

Sociological and cultural aspects of autism come into play with recognition of autism, approaches to its support services and therapies, and how autism affects how we define personhood.[1] The autism rights movement is based on a belief that autism is a different way of being and not a disorder to be cured. In contrast, many parents argue for a cure.[2]

Contents

Terminology

Although some prefer to use the person-first terminology person with autism,[3] some members of the autistic community prefer autistic person or autistic in formal English, to stress that autism is a part of their identity rather than a disease they have.[2] In addition, phrases like suffers from autism are objectionable to some people.[2][3]

The autistic community has developed abbreviations for commonly used terms, such as:

  • Aspie – a person with Asperger syndrome.[4]
  • Autie – an autistic person. It can be contrasted with aspie to refer to those specifically diagnosed with classic autism.[5]
  • Autistics and Cousins (AC) — a cover term including aspies, auties, and their "cousins", i.e. people with some autistic traits but no formal diagnosis.[6]
  • Curebie – a person with the desire to cure autism. This term is highly derogatory.[2]
  • Neurodiversity – tolerance of people regardless of neurological wiring.[7]
  • Neurotypical (NT) – an individual who is not on the autism spectrum.[3]

Autism rights movement

There is some work in the autism community on raising awareness among neurotypical society, but the very nature of autism makes self-promotion difficult for autistic people.

The autism rights movement encourages autistic people to "embrace their neurodiversity" and encourages society to accept autistics as they are. They advocate giving children more tools to cope with the non-autistic world instead of trying to change them into neurotypicals. They say society should learn to tolerate harmless behaviours such as tics and stims like hand flapping or humming.[8] Autism rights activists say that "tics, like repetitive rocking and violent outbursts" can be managed if others make an effort to understand autistic people, while other autistic traits, "like difficulty with eye contact, with grasping humor or with breaking from routines", wouldn't require corrective efforts if others were more tolerant.[2]

Many people disagree with the aims of the autism rights movement, saying that the movement overstates the gifts associated with autism, which could jeopardize funding for research and treatment.[8] Many parents of children with autism say that the notion of "positive living with autism" has little relevance to them, and that autism rights are for "the high-functioning autistics and Aspies who make up the bulk of the movement".[8] Many parents say that behavioral therapy provides help in caring for children who are sometimes aggressive and that autism exacts a toll on the entire family.[2]

Autistic pride

Autistic pride refers to pride in autism and shifting views of autism from "disease" to "difference". Autistic pride emphasizes the innate potential in all human phenotypic expressions and celebrates the diversity various neurological types express.

Autistic pride asserts that autistic people are not sick; rather, they have a unique set of characteristics that provide them many rewards and challenges, not unlike their non-autistic peers.[4][9][10]

Curing autism is a controversial and politicized issue. The "autistic community" can be divided into several groups. Some seek a cure for autism—sometimes dubbed as pro-cure, others consider a cure unnecessary or unethical,[2][4][11] or feel that autism is not a disease.[2]

Community and culture

With the recent increases in autism recognition and new approaches to educating and socializing autistics, an autistic culture has begun to develop. Autistic culture is based on a belief that autism is a unique way of being and not a disorder to be cured.[2] The Aspie world, as it is sometimes called, contains people with Asperger syndrome (AS) and high functioning autism (HFA), and can be linked to three historical trends: the emergence of AS and HFA as labels, the emergence of the disability rights movement, and the rise of the Internet. Autistic communities exist both online and offline; many people use these for support and communication with others like themselves, as the social limitations of autism make it difficult to make friends, to establish support within general society, and to construct an identity within society.[12]

Because many autistics find it easier to communicate online than in person, a large number of online resources are available.[9] Some individuals with autism learn sign language, participate in online chat rooms, discussion boards, and websites, or use communication devices at autism-community social events such as Autreat. The Internet helps bypass non-verbal cues and emotional sharing that autistics find so hard to interact with.[13][14] It gives autistic individuals a way to communicate and form online communities.[15] Conducting work, conversation and interviews online in chat rooms, rather than via phone calls or personal contact, helps level the playing field for autistics.[8] A New York Times article said "the impact of the Internet on autistics may one day be compared in magnitude to the spread of sign language among the deaf" because it opens new opportunities for communication by filtering out "sensory overload that impedes communication among autistics".[13]

Online interaction has disadvantages. Overreliance on the Internet for social interaction can lead to reduction in already-limited human contact. Much misinformation and fraud is available online. Because people with ASD often interpret sources literally, it may be particularly difficult for them to tell whether an online correspondent is lying. Based on unreliable information, people diagnose themselves with Asperger syndrome and related conditions, and then present themselves as individuals with genuine ASD.[5]

Events and public recognition

World Autism Day

World Autism Day, also called World Autism Awareness Day, is marked on April 2. It was designated by the United Nations General Assembly at the end of 2007.[16] On April 2, 2009, activists left 150 strollers near Central Park in New York City to raise awareness that autism is estimated to affect one in 150 children.[17] There are many celebration activities all over the world on April 2 - World Autism Day. “Autism knows no geographic boundaries — it affects individuals and families on every continent and in every country,” said Suzanne Wright, co-founder of Autism Speaks. “The celebration of World Autism Awareness Day is an important way to help the world better understand the scope of this health crisis and the need for compassion and acceptance for those living with autism. This remarkable day — the first of many to come — promises to be a time of great hope and happiness as we work to build a global autism community.”[18]

Light It Up Blue

In 2010, Autism Speaks launched the Light It Up Blue initiative.[19] Light It Up Blue sees prominent buildings across North America and the world – including the Empire State Building in New York City and the CN Tower in Toronto, Canada – turn their lights blue to raise awareness for autism and to commemorate World Autism Awareness Day.[20]

Autism Sunday

Autism Sunday, also known as the International Day of Prayer for Autism and Asperger Syndrome, is observed on the second Sunday of February. It is supported by church leaders around the world.[21]

Autism Awareness Year

The year 2002 was declared Autism Awareness Year in the United Kingdom—this idea was initiated by Ivan and Charika Corea, parents of a child with autism, Charin.[22] Autism Awareness Year was led by the British Institute of Brain Injured Children, Disabilities Trust, The Shirley Foundation, National Autistic Society, Autism London and 800 organizations in the United Kingdom. It had the personal backing of British Prime Minister Tony Blair.[23] This was the first ever occasion of partnership working on autism on such a huge scale. 2002 Autism Awareness Year helped raise awareness of the serious issues concerning autism and Asperger's Syndrome across the United Kingdom.[24] A major conference, Autism 2002 was held at the King's Fund in London with debates in the House of Commons and the House of Lords in Westminster. Autism awareness ribbons were worn to mark the year.[25]

British autism advocates want autistic people acknowledged as a minority rather than as disabled, because they say that "disability discrimination laws don't protect those who are not disabled but who 'still have something that makes them look or act differently from other people'."[4] But the autism community is split over this issue, and some view this notion as radical.[4]

Autistic Pride Day

Autistic Pride Day is an Aspies for Freedom initiative, celebrated on June 18 each year. It is a day of celebration of the neurodiversity of people on the autism spectrum, compared by autism rights advocates to the civil rights and gay rights movements and even modeled after the Gay pride movement.[4]

Autreat

At Autreat—an annual autistic gathering—participants compared their movement to gay rights activists, or the Deaf culture, where sign language is preferred over surgery that might restore hearing.[2] Other local organizations have also arisen: for example, a European counterpart, Autscape, was created about 2005.[26]


Asperger syndrome and interpersonal relationships

Individuals with Asperger syndrome (AS) may develop problems in their abilities to engage successfully in interpersonal relationships.

Social impact

Asperger syndrome may lead to problems in social interaction with peers. These problems can be severe or mild depending on the individual. Children with AS are often the target of bullying at school due to their idiosyncratic behavior, precise language, unusual interests, and impaired ability to perceive and respond in socially expected ways to nonverbal cues, particularly in interpersonal conflict. Children with AS may be overly literal, and may have difficulty interpreting and responding to sarcasm, banter, or metaphorical speech. Difficulties with social interaction may also be manifest in a lack of play with other children.[27]

The above problems can even arise in the family; given an unfavorable family environment, the child may be subject to emotional abuse. A child or teen with AS is often puzzled by this mistreatment, unaware of what has been done incorrectly. Unlike other pervasive development disorders, most children with AS want to be social, but fail to socialize successfully, which can lead to later withdrawal and asocial behavior, especially in adolescence.[28] At this stage of life especially, they risk being drawn into unsuitable and inappropriate friendships and social groups. People with AS often interact better with those considerably older or younger than themselves, rather than those within their own age group.[27]

Children with AS often display advanced abilities for their age in language, reading, mathematics, spatial skills, and/or music—sometimes into the "gifted" range—but this may be counterbalanced by considerable delays in other developmental areas. This combination of traits can lead to problems with teachers and other authority figures. A child with AS might be regarded by teachers as a "problem child" or a "poor performer." The child’s extremely low tolerance for what they perceive to be ordinary and mundane tasks, such as typical homework assignments, can easily become frustrating; a teacher may well consider the child arrogant, spiteful, and insubordinate. Lack of support and understanding, in combination with the child's anxieties, can result in problematic behavior (such as severe tantrums, violent and angry outbursts, and withdrawal).[29]

Difficulties in relationships

Two traits sometimes found in AS individuals are mind-blindness (the inability to predict the beliefs and intentions of others) and alexithymia (the inability to identify and interpret emotional signals in oneself or others), which reduce the ability to be empathetically attuned to others.[30][31] Alexithymia in AS functions as an independent variable relying on different neural networks than those implicated in theory of mind.[30][31] In fact, lack of Theory of Mind in AS may be a result of a lack of information available to the mind due to the operation of the alexithymic deficit.[30][31]

A second issue related to alexithymia involves the inability to identify and modulate strong emotions such as sadness or anger, which leaves the individual prone to "sudden affective outbursts such as crying or rage"[32][33][34] According to Tony Attwood, the inability to express feelings using words may also predispose the individual to use physical acts to articulate the mood and release the emotional energy.[35]

People with AS report a feeling of being unwillingly detached from the world around them. They may have difficulty finding a life partner or getting married due to poor social skills.[36] The complexity and inconsistency of the social world can pose an extreme challenge for individuals with AS. In the UK Asperger's is covered by the Disability Discrimination Act; those with AS who get treated badly because of it may have some redress. The first case was Hewett v Motorola 2004[37] (sometimes referred to as Hewitt) and the second was Isles v Ealing Council.[38] The same applies in the United States with the Americans with Disabilities Act, amended in 2008 to include autism spectrum disorders.[39]

The intense focus and tendency to work things out logically often grants people with AS a high level of ability in their field of interest. When these special interests coincide with a materially or socially useful task, the person with AS can lead a profitable career and a fulfilled life. The child obsessed with a specific area may succeed in employment related to that area.[40]

Gender aspects

Autism is thought of as a condition mostly affecting males, with males up to four times more likely than females to be diagnosed with autism or Asperger syndrome. Females with autism spectrum disorders are "research orphans" according to Yale's Ami Klin; some drugs used to treat anxiety or hyperactivity that may accompany autism are rarely tested on females with autism.[41] Autism may express differently in the sexes. Females may be more concerned with how they are viewed by peers and the failure to connect with people outside of their immediate family could lead to severe anxiety or clinical depression.[41] Females with autism who have normal intelligence may be more socially disadvantaged than males because of the "rising level of social interaction that comes in middle school," when females' "friendships often hinge on attention to feelings and lots of rapid and nuanced communication." Females may suffer additionally by being placed in specialized educational programs, where they will be surrounded by males and further isolated from female social contacts.[41] Although sample sizes are too small to draw firm conclusions, one study suggests that females are less likely than males over the long-term to marry, have families, go to college, have a job, and live on their own. Females may also be different from males in terms of interests; females with autism rarely have interests in numbers or have stores of specialized knowledge.[41] The profile of autism may change as more is understood about females, whose autism may go undiagnosed.[41]

Autistic adults

Communication and social problems often cause difficulties in many areas of an autistic adult's life. A 2008 study found that adults with ASD commonly experience difficulty starting social interactions, longing for greater intimacy, a profound sense of isolation, and effort to develop greater social or self awareness.[42]

A much smaller proportion of adult autistics marry than the general population.[36] It has been hypothesized that people with autism are subject to assortative mating; they tend to mate with each other and produce autistic offspring.[43] This hypothesis has been publicized in the popular press,[44] but has not been empirically tested.

Baron-Cohen said that an increasing technological society has opened up niches for people with Asperger syndrome, who may choose fields that are "highly systematised and predictable." People with AS could do well in workplace roles that are "system-centered, and connect with the nitty-gritty detail of the product or the system."[45]

Relationships with animals

Temple Grandin, autistic designer of cattle handling systems, said that one reason she can easily figure out how a cow would react is because autistic people can easily "think the way that animals think."[46] According to Grandin, animals do not have "complex emotions such as shame or guilt" and they do not think in language. She says that, although not everything about animals is like a person with autism, the similarity is that they think visually and without language. She says people do not make this connection because the study of autism and the study of animal behavior are parallel disciplines involving different individuals.[46] Despite these similarities, the degree to which autistic individuals can be said to think like animals remains undetermined; non-human animals as well as humans have evolved cognitive specializations that may or may not share characteristics with other species.[47]

Dawn Prince-Hughes, diagnosed with Asperger's, describes her observations of gorillas in Songs of the Gorilla Nation.[48]

Autistic savant

An autistic savant is an autistic person with extreme talent in one or more areas of study. Although there is a common association between savant syndrome and autism (an association made popular by the 1988 film Rain Man), most autistic people are not savants and savantism is not unique to autistic people, though there does seem to be some relation. One in ten autistic people may have notable abilities, but prodigious savants like Stephen Wiltshire are very rare; only about 100 such people have been described in the century since savants were first identified, and there are only about 25 living prodigious savants worldwide.[49]

Scholarship

Autism spectrum disorders received increasing attention from social-science scholars in the early 2000s, with the goals of improving support services and therapies, arguing that autism should be tolerated as a difference not a disorder, and by how autism affects the definition of personhood and identity.[1] Sociological research has also investigated how social institutions, particularly families, cope with the challenges associated with autism.[50]

Media portrayals

Much of the public perception of autism is based on its portrayals in novels, biographies, movies, and TV series. Many of these portrayals have been inaccurate, and have contributed to a harmful divergence between public perception and the clinical reality of autism. For example, in the movie Mozart and the Whale (2005), the opening scene gives four clues that a leading character has Asperger syndrome, and two of these clues are extraordinary savant skills. The savant skills are not needed in the film, but in the movies savant skills have become a stereotype for the autism spectrum, regardless of the fact that most autistic people are not savants.[51]

Some works from the 1970s have autistic characters, who are rarely labeled.[52]

Autistic characters also appear in many works by non-autistic authors. Mark Haddon's 2003 novel The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, has been celebrated for its immersion into the world of its teenage autistic narrator.[52] The Speed of Dark, by Elizabeth Moon, explores the possibility of a cure for autism and its effect on autistics. Margaret Atwood's novel Oryx and Crake has a university labeled Asperger's U, where almost every student appears to have Asperger Syndrome or autism in varying degrees of severity and form. People in the university refer to non-autists as neurotypicals and seem to view them as something altogether different (and perhaps inferior) to themselves.

Children of the Stars is an award-winning documentary about children with autism in China.

My Name Is Khan is a 2010 Bollywood film which shows the lead character played by Shahrukh Khan (Rizwan Khan) suffering from Asperger's syndrome. The movie garnered critical acclaim and shed light on Asperger's syndrome in India.

Alphas features an autistic character, Gary Bell (Ryan Cartwright) as one of its main characters.

Notable individuals

Notable individuals with autism spectrum disorders represent diverse professions such as anthropology, video game design and television production. Some notable artists, authors and musicians and such figures as Richard Borcherds, a Fields Medal winner,[53] Temple Grandin, a food animal handling systems designer and author,[54] Tim Page, a Pulitzer Prize-winning critic and author[55][56] and Vernon L. Smith, a Nobel Laureate in economics, also have autism spectrum disorders.[57]

There are many published speculative claims about historical figures who may have had autism spectrum disorders. Henry Cavendish, one of history's foremost scientists, may have been autistic. George Wilson, a notable chemist and physician, wrote a book about Cavendish entitled, The Life of the Honourable Henry Cavendish, published in 1851. From Wilson's detailed description it seems that Cavendish may have exhibited many classic signs of autism.[58][59][60][61] Fred Volkmar, a psychiatrist and autism expert at the Yale Child Study Center is skeptical; he says, "There is unfortunately a sort of cottage industry of finding that everyone has Asperger's."[60]

See also

References

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  59. ^ Sacks O (2001). "Henry Cavendish: an early case of Asperger's syndrome?". Neurology 57 (7): 1347. PMID 11591871. 
  60. ^ a b Goode E (2001-10-09). "CASES; A Disorder Far Beyond Eccentricity". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/health/article-page.html?res=9E0CE6DB103CF93AA35753C1A9679C8B63&n=Top%2fNews%2fHealth%2fDiseases%2c%20Conditions%2c%20and%20Health%20Topics%2fAutism. Retrieved 2007-11-26. 
  61. ^ James I (2003). "Singular scientists". J R Soc Med 96 (1): 36–9. doi:10.1258/jrsm.96.1.36. PMC 539373. PMID 12519805. http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?tool=pmcentrez&artid=539373. Retrieved 2007-11-26. 

Further reading

  • Davidson J (2008). "Autistic culture online: virtual communication and cultural expression on the spectrum". Soc Cult Geogr 9 (7): 791–806. doi:10.1080/14649360802382586. 
  • Nadesan, Majia (2005). Constructing Autism: Unravelling the "Truth" and Discovering the Social. London: Routledge. ISBN 0415321808. 
  • Rossetti Z, Ashby C, Arndt K, Chadwick M, Kasahara M (2008). "'I like others to not try to fix me': agency, independence, and autism". Intellect Dev Disabil 46 (5): 364–75. doi:10.1352/2008.46:364-375. PMID 19090638. 

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