Perpetual Children is a narrative history of debates over the definition and appropriate treatment of autism in France since 1950, noting the French divergence from psychological norms in the rest of the world. Examining the works of psychoanalysts, the activities of parents associations, and the efforts of autistic self-advocates, the book argues that the consistent framing of autism as a form of childhood psychosis marginalized autists and emphasized the voices ofparents and professionals. This framing also justified the continued use of psychoanalysis as an intervention due to the placement of autism within the family dynamic. Even as research in the United States pointed to biological and neurological conceptions of autism, the French continued to support a psychogenic origin for the disorder, impacting state policy and medical norms for decades. This position energized conflict between professionals and parents concerning expertise, leading to political and legal changes at the end of the twentieth century. By the twenty-first century, French autists entered the debate to transform its parameters and asserttheir own position as experts on autism, reconceiving the disorder outside of childhood to a limited degree. Perpetual Children reveals the international dimension of the story of autism and how the French context provides a different perspective on its history.
Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction: The French Divergence; 1. The Transatlantic Era of Autism; Childrearing Experts; Child Psychology; Infantile Psychosis and the Case of Sammy; Building on the Consensus; 2. Parents as a United Front; Parenting in the Age of Autism; White Butterflies as Early Advocates; Chambery and the International Politicization of Associations; The Fire at Froissy and the National Stage; The Politics of Froissy; 3. The Psychoanalytic State; Associations and the French State; Experimental Schools and Psychoanalysis; Parenting by Radio and the Return of the Expert; Parents as Participants and the Limits of Law; Un autre regard sur la folie; Laffaire Bettelheim; 4. Parental Expertise as Resistance; UNAPEI and Parent Experts; Confronting the System; Diagnostics and Old Wine in New Bottles; Parents in the Public Sphere; La grande cause nationale 1990; 5. The Deepening Divergence; Carrying on la cause; Against the Hegemony; Renewed Activism; The European Dimension; Psychoanalytic Resistance; La baguette magique; 6. The Battle and the Arrival of Self,Advocacy; Le livre noir de la psychanalyse; The Wall and the Battle against It; The Beginnings of Self,Advocacy; The New Militancy; Organizations for Autistic Identity; Conclusion: A New Age of Autism?; Bibliography; Index;
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