Listening to autistic voices regarding competing for social status

Added on 10/12/2024

Type de contenu

Journal article of the type Perspective ( ; english)

Listening to autistic voices regarding competing for social status published in the journal "Autism" n°28, vol.4, 2 pages , doi: 10.1177/13623613231217057

*All co-authors had publicly identified as autistic. [Learn more about this mention]

Summary/Presentation

Human social organizations are complex. Yet little research exists on autistic people's attitudes about social hierarchies. Clinicians and the medical establishment regard social deficits as a key aspect of autism. If social deficits are paramount, then we expect autistic people to have difficulty navigating social hierarchies. We reject the premise of social deficits (while acknowledging that social misunderstandings interfere in the daily life of autistics) but suggest that researchers learn by listening to what autistic adults say about social hierarchies. We review writings by autistic people, including advice books, memoirs, book reviews, online discussion posts, and the mission-statement of an autistic-led organization. These suggest that autistic people find status-seeking illogical and prefer egalitarian relationships. The consistency of these themes across different types of writings is a reason for researchers to systematically study reduced status-seeking in autistic individuals.

For your information:

(1) References in blue are resources listed on our site.

(2) Authors listed in this bibliography whose names are in color have published other resources referenced on the site. Clicking on the name allows you to see the list of resources they have published and shared on the site.

(3) Authors whose names are followed by an asterisk have publicly disclosed being autistic.


  • I. Ford (2010). "A field guide to earthlings: An autistic/Asperger view of neurotypical behavior". Ian Ford Software Corporation.

  • M. Gernsbacher, M. Yergeau (2019). "Empirical failures of the claim that autistic people lack a theory of mind". Archives of Scientific Psychology, 7(1), doi:10.1037/arc0000067

  • W. Holliday (1999). "Pretending to be normal: Living with Asperger’s syndrome". Jessica Kingsley.

  • L. James (2017). "Odd girl out: An autistic woman in a neurotypical world". Boxtree.

  • V. Jaswal, N. Akhtar (2019). "Being versus appearing socially uninterested: Challenging assumptions about social motivation in autism". Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 42, Article e82.


 
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