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See It Feelingly - Classic Novels, Autistic Readers, and the Schooling of a No-Good English Professor (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R981
Discovery Miles 9 810
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See It Feelingly - Classic Novels, Autistic Readers, and the Schooling of a No-Good English Professor (Hardcover)
Series: Thought in the Act
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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"We each have Skype accounts and use them to discuss [Moby-Dick]
face to face. Once a week, we spread the worded whale out in front
of us; we dissect its head, eyes, and bones, careful not to hurt or
kill it. The Professor and I are not whale hunters. We are not
letting the whale die. We are shaping it, letting it swim through
the Web with a new and polished look."-Tito Mukhopadhyay Since the
1940s researchers have been repeating claims about autistic
people's limited ability to understand language, to partake in
imaginative play, and to generate the complex theory of mind
necessary to appreciate literature. In See It Feelingly Ralph James
Savarese, an English professor whose son is one of the first
nonspeaking autistics to graduate from college, challenges this
view. Discussing fictional works over a period of years with
readers from across the autism spectrum, Savarese was stunned by
the readers' ability to expand his understanding of texts he knew
intimately. Their startling insights emerged not only from the way
their different bodies and brains lined up with a story but also
from their experiences of stigma and exclusion. For Mukhopadhyay
Moby-Dick is an allegory of revenge against autism, the frantic
quest for a cure. The white whale represents the autist's baffling,
because wordless, immersion in the sensory. Computer programmer and
cyberpunk author Dora Raymaker skewers the empathetic failings of
the bounty hunters in Philip K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of
Electric Sheep? Autistics, some studies suggest, offer instruction
in embracing the nonhuman. Encountering a short story about a
lonely marine biologist in Antarctica, Temple Grandin remembers her
past with an uncharacteristic emotional intensity, and she reminds
the reader of the myriad ways in which people can relate to
fiction. Why must there be a norm? Mixing memoir with current
research in autism and cognitive literary studies, Savarese
celebrates how literature springs to life through the contrasting
responses of unique individuals, while helping people both on and
off the spectrum to engage more richly with the world.
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