“‘Since the publication of my paper on Asperger’s work,’ she admitted, ‘I have felt like Pandora after she opened the box.’” To compare the revision of the DSM’s criteria of Autism to the Greek myth where Pandora opens all evil…
What Sister Viktorine Knew
“Carl von Rokitansky…reminding his colleagues that they must always regard their patients with respect rather than seeing them merely as guinea pigs for their research” (84) This is one of the most important quotes in the whole chapter, although there…
Research Projects: THE PROMPT
Choose a text (or a small group of related texts) that represents some kind of neurological difference. Make an argument about how the genre or form of your chosen texts shapes its contribution to public conversations about neurodiversity. Most projects will take the form of a 3,000…
Some Questions for Next Week’s Reading Responses
I’m going to ask some big questions here. Think about whether you want to address them in your reading responses. If you do, my suggestion is to answer them with the help of passages from Silberman’s NeuroTribes. Is anybody neurotypical?…
NeuroTribes – Silberman
“[Autism] was certainly nothing to be proud of.” Pg 41 I’m going to be raw for a second here: the first time I read this line (and this may sound insensitive), I thought “Wait, what? Society doesn’t view autism as…
The more I learn about neuroatypical people, the more I feel as if I have some sort of neurological issue. I see a lot of myself in the different people we have read about in is class and I in…
Is it Oliver Sack’s book or his patients ?
We were discussing in class whether Oliver Sacks was telling the truth when it came to the narration of his books. Because of the callaboration between a doctor and his patients. The patients arent mentally capable of having a say…
Neurotribe
In the beginning of Neurotribe the author is describing his experiences while being on board a ship named Volendam. At the time he was doing research for wired magazine amongst a group of computer programmers. The author offers vivid descriptions…
Are we our Past? Present? or Future?
Sacks’s “The Last Mariner” really intrigued me. We have been debating whether we are our brains or if we are not our brains. In this case, what happens when our brains can no longer remember? Jimmy is a 49 year…
“It” and “I:” Do Diseases Pay Rent?
In both “Witty Ticcy Ray” and “A Surgeon’s Life,” Sacks peculiarly describes Tourette’s Syndrome and the individual as two separate entities known as “it” and “i.” He rationalizes this by arguing that “any disease introduces a doubleness into life- an…