Monday, September 2, 2019
Autism in the Media Essay -- Media Argumentative Persuasive Argument
Autism in the Media      à     à  Ã   "Weepinbell, w-e-e-p-i-n-b-e-l-l;  Tentacool, t-e-n-t-a-c-o-o-l ; Geodude . . . ," yelled Connor. We were playing  his favorite game - identify and spell the names of all 156 Pokà ªmon characters.  Connor is a three-year-old boy I worked with as part of the SonRise therapy that  his mother organized after he was diagnosed with autism. During my thrice-weekly  Connor-directed playtime visits, I entered his world instead of making him enter  mine and encouraged eye contact to strengthen Connor's connection with others.       à       I begin this critique of autism depiction in mass media relating my  relationship with Connor because he informs my understanding of autism and  colors my critique of media representations. For people who do not know autistic  individuals personally, however, perceptions of autism have been shaped, by and  large, by character depictions in a series of feature films over the last  fifteen years, most notably Rain Man (1988), House of Cards (1993), and Molly  (1999). I here examine these three films, each with an autistic main character,  to evaluate the image of autism presented to the public and to discuss how that  image has changed in the last fifteen years. However, before an analysis of the  films, I will briefly overview autism as it is currently diagnosed and treated.       à       Autism is the label given to a set of behaviors summarized by the  International Classification of Disease ICD-10 Handbook as1:      1. Impairment in reciprocal social interaction.      2. Impairment in verbal and non-verbal communication and in imaginative  activity.      3. Markedly restricted variety in activities and interests.      à       Generally, autistic children are first identified by ...              ...ons of autism over the last fifteen years reflect  popular notions and hopes for cures to psychological disorders. Because mass  media representations of autism reach a thousand fold the number of individuals  who ready Psychology Review Today and other academic journals, films are an  important source of information and a possible forum for advocacy and should be  used as such.      à       Bibliography      1. Frith, U. 1989. Autism; Explaining the Enigma. Cambridge: Basil Blackwell.       2. Hobson, P. 1993. Autism and the Development of Mind. Hillsdale: Lawrence  Erlbaum Associates.      3. Mesibov, G., Lynn, A. and Klinger, L. 1997. Autism; Understanding the  Disorder. New York: Plenum Press      4. Grandin, T. 1995. "An Inside View of Autism."  http://www.autism.org/temple/inside.html Feature Films:      Rain Man (1989)      Molly (1999)      House of Cards (1993)                      
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