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Understanding Others in a Neurodiverse World Gemma Williams

Understanding Others in a Neurodiverse World By Gemma Williams

Understanding Others in a Neurodiverse World by Gemma Williams


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Summary

For a long time, researchers have thought that social communication difficulties experienced by autistic people are due to cognitive and social deficits. This book offers a neurodiversity-affirming alternative to this problematic approach, by presenting a novel perspective on cross-neurotype communication.

Understanding Others in a Neurodiverse World Summary

Understanding Others in a Neurodiverse World: A Radical Perspective on Communication and Shared Meaning by Gemma Williams

Autistic people often experience difficulties with social communication. This can impact all areas of life and can contribute to poorer mental health outcomes, reduced opportunities for fulfilling social interactions and barriers to health and social care, education and employment. This book offers a new way of understanding why cross-neurotype mis attunements in communication may happen by taking the double empathy problem the reframing of social communication difficulties as a two-way problem, not simply the result of an autistic deficit and a little-known cognitive linguistics theory, relevance theory, as a starting point.

Weaving together threads from critical autism studies, a social-justice perspective, cognitive science, linguistics and sociology, this book leads the reader towards a new, radical perspective of how we can understand these breakdowns in understanding.

About Gemma Williams

Gemma Williamsis an autistic autism researcher, musician and ex-beekeeper, living in Sussex. She currently works as a Research Officer on the Wellcome Trust-funded Autism: from menstruation to menopause project, for Swansea University. Gemma is a linguist by heart, but following her ESRC Postdoctoral Fellowship at the University of Brighton in Social Policy, her research interests have extended to more social justice-related issues, including: autistic peoples experiences of loneliness, barriers to healthcare for neurodivergent people, sensory environments of public spaces and, most recently autistic reproductive and gynecological healthcare.

Gemma is a member of the Westminster Commission on Autism and an Associate with the National Development Team for Inclusion where shes contributed to a number of commissioned reports, projects and inquiries aimed at improving service provision for autistic and neurodivergent people within the UK, NHS England and Local Authorities.

Table of Contents

Introduction

Section 1 Considers different perspectives on how communication and shared meaning is achieved
1: Knowing and understanding by being in the world
2: Knowing and understanding others
3: Making sense in a complex world

Section 2 Provides a critical summary of what has been meant by the term autism since its conception
4: So, what is autism?
5: Autistic language use: a short history

Section 3A suggestion for how we might understand why communication often breaks down between autistic and non-autistic people
6: The Double Empathy Problem
7: Mind the gap
8: But hows that relevant?

Section 4considers the social exclusion of autistic people and how this can add to the communication breakdowns and impact access to services and quality of life.
9: The importance of getting it right
10: The importance of intersectional thinking
11: Towards a connected, inclusive society

Additional information

NGR9781803883700
9781803883700
1803883707
Understanding Others in a Neurodiverse World: A Radical Perspective on Communication and Shared Meaning by Gemma Williams
New
Paperback
Pavilion Publishing and Media Ltd
2024-07-29
188
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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