Autism Doesn’t Speak, People Do

M. Bakan
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Abstract

How might an ethnomusicology of autism best serve to cultivate an epistemological landscape in which autistic voices are central to contemporary discourses on autistic personhood, civil rights, and ontology? The inherent integrity and dignity of autistic ways of being have been attacked and marginalized for as long as the term “autism” has been in existence. Reversing that course is an essential move toward autistic repatriation, and to contribute to the documentation and dissemination of autistic voices speaking on their own behalf through ethnography—and also through music and discourses about music—is to engage in a form of advocacy archiving that fosters repatriation. It is to such a form of repatriation that this chapter is dedicated, and that work is achieved here principally through the re-presentation (as opposed to representation) of chat messaging-based dialogues between the author and one of his principal autistic musician collaborators, the pseudonymous Donald Rindale.
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自闭症不会说话,人会
自闭症的民族音乐学如何才能最好地培养一种认识论的景观,在这种景观中,自闭症的声音是当代关于自闭症人格、公民权利和本体论的话语的核心?自从“自闭症”这个词存在以来,自闭症患者固有的完整性和尊严就一直受到攻击和边缘化。扭转这一进程是自闭症患者遣返的重要一步,通过民族志——也通过音乐和关于音乐的话语——帮助记录和传播自闭症患者为自己发声的声音,是一种促进遣返的倡导档案形式。这一章致力于这样一种形式的回归,这里的工作主要是通过作者和他的主要自闭症音乐家合作者之一,笔名唐纳德·林德尔(Donald Rindale)之间基于聊天信息的对话的再现(而不是再现)来实现的。
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