Bültmann & Gerriets
Chasing the Intact Mind
How the Severely Autistic and Intellectually Disabled Were Excluded from the Debates That Affect Them Most
von Amy S F Lutz
Verlag: Sydney University Press
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-19-768384-2
Erschienen am 03.10.2023
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 242 mm [H] x 164 mm [B] x 21 mm [T]
Gewicht: 417 Gramm
Umfang: 192 Seiten

Preis: 34,50 €
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Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Klappentext

Amy S. F. Lutz, PhD, is a historian of medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. She has written about severe autism for many platforms, including The Atlantic, Slate, Spectrum, and Psychology Today, as well as in two previous books: We Walk: Life with Severe Autism (2020) and Each Day I Like It Better: Autism, ECT, and the Treatment of Our Most Impaired Children (2014). She is Vice President of the National Council on Severe Autism and lives outside Philadelphia with her husband and five children.



  • PART I: THE HISTORY OF THE INTACT MIND

  • Introduction

  • Chapter 1: Valuing the Disabled Child: The Emergence of Disability Parent Memoirs

  • Chapter 2: Whose Fault Is It? Psychoanalysis and the First Autism Parent Memoirs

  • Chapter 3: Is There a "Key"? Biomedical Discourse and Second-Generation Autism Memoirs

  • PART II: THE CASE STUDIES

  • Chapter 4: The Battle Against Sheltered Workshops

  • Chapter 5: The Erosion of Guardianship

  • Chapter 6: The Resurgence of Facilitated Communication

  • Conclusion



In Chasing the Intact Mind, Amy Lutz traces the history of the "intact mind" concept, explaining how it influences current disability policy and practice in the United States. Lutz describes how we got to this moment, where the severely autistic are elided out of public discourse and the intensive, disability-specific supports they need defunded or closed altogether. Lutz argues that focusing on the intact mind and marginalizing those with severe disability reproduces historic patterns of discrimination that yoked human worth to intelligence, and that it is only by making space for the impaired mind that we will be able to resolve these ongoing clashes--as well as even larger questions of personhood, dependency, and care.


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