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Resisting Normal: Questioning Media Depictions of Autistic Youth and Their Families
Author(s) -
Rebecca Dosch
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of disability research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.354
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 1745-3011
pISSN - 1501-7419
DOI - 10.16993/sjdr.56
Subject(s) - narrative , normality , mythology , framing (construction) , hegemony , sociology , psychology , disability studies , perspective (graphical) , gender studies , psychoanalysis , epistemology , social psychology , art , literature , history , philosophy , political science , archaeology , politics , law , visual arts
A critical social sciences perspective, critical race and disability studies, media studies, lived experience, and the neurodivergence movement shape a conceptual framework in this paper to critique and resist popular media tropes of autistic people and their families. ‘Normal’ and its modern meanings are presented, followed by a theoretical re-framing. Then, an irreverent and informal critique of one example US newscast highlights the dominant narrative and invites readers to unlearn these myths of normal. Recurring hegemonic news frames reflect a larger culture where familial abuse and violence against autistic people is dangerously presented as reasonable. Counter narratives exist, however. Autism can be understood as a natural, integral, welcome part of a wider human neurodiversity that enriches society. Families and autistic advocates must work together to resist and respond to pressure to conform to myths of normality.

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