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Ironically, many people with autism themselves (such as Temple Grandin, Therese Joliffe and Gunilla Gerland) have given illuminating first-person accounts of autism and expressed their anger at psychoanalytic "interpretations" which have no connection to their experience.
Alvarez studiously ignores these, and fails to even mention the possibility that autistic people might have opinions of their own on the subject.
After Alvarez's first book advocating psychoanalytic treatment of autism, two people with high-functioning autism actually wrote an article critcizing her work for ignoring and obscuring the real experiences and feelings of people with autism and got it published in the Journal of Child Psychotherapy.
Unsurprisingly, that isn't mentioned here either.
Instead, we have the usual insinuations that parents are deeply involved in their child's condition, that there is a "non-autistic child hidden behind the autism" (presumably waiting to be liberated by psychoanalysis), that at least some cases of autism are caused by "trauma", and that those who point out that autism is a neurological condition are fatalistic and uninterested in helping children with autism.
What I don't understand is how Alvarez can conceivably not be aware of the incoherency and intellectual dishonesty of her views, and claim to be "listening" to people with autism while so consistently ignoring their opinions. One can only assume that this book was written in very bad faith.
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