Offre spéciale sur les Précis de droit Stämpfli : Jusqu’à fin novembre, profitez d’un rabais de 20% sur les manuels d’enseignement et les livres pour la pratique suivants.
Thèmes principaux
Publications
Services
Auteurs
Éditions
Shop

Autism and the Empathy Epidemic

Contenu

Threading an enquiry through debates in neurodiversity scholarship and disability studies as well as film theory, this open access book challenges the widespread idea that autism is an epidemic characterised predominantly by a deficit of empathy, arguing that the reverse is true: we are living through an empathy epidemic in which autism is the outcast. In 1908, the British psychologist, Edward Titchener, translated the German term Einfühlung into the English language as 'empathy', around the same the time that Eugen Bleuler coined the term 'autism' for a group of symptoms subset to an emerging classification of schizophrenia. Empathy became a useful tool to describe relations between people in a clinical context, but in the process of its incorporation into psychology, it shed its rich sensory meaning from Einfühlung as 'feeling-into' weather systems, architectural forms, and artworks. A remarkable reversal takes place in the first part of the twentieth century whereby empathy becomes an intra-human ethical act, and autism emerges as its inverse. Digging up and examining the buried relation between autism with an earlier form of 'empathy', this book argues that autism, like cinema, models an ethical apprehension of the more-than-human world. The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by The Wellcome Trust.

Informations bibliographiques

juillet 2025, env. 144 Pages, Critical Interventions in the Medical and Health Humanities, Anglais
Bloomsbury
978-1-350-34505-8

Sommaire

Mots-clés

Autres titres de la collection: Critical Interventions in the Medical and Health Humanities

Afficher tout

Autres titres sur ce thème