Kids Across the Spectrums : Growing Up Autistic in the Digital Age
by
Meryl Alper
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10
0262545365
ISBN-13
9780262545365
Publisher
MIT Press Ltd
Imprint
MIT Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Aug 15th, 2023
Print length
328 Pages
Weight
394 grams
Dimensions
15.20 x 22.90 x 3.00 cms
Product Classification:
Family & health
Ksh 6,850.00
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An ethnographic study of diverse children on the autism spectrum and the role of media and technology in their everyday lives.
In spite of widespread assumptions that young people on the autism spectrum have a natural attraction to technologya premise that leads to significant speculation about how media helps or harms themrelatively little research actually exists about their everyday tech use. In Kids Across the Spectrums, Meryl Alper fills this gap with the first book-length ethnography of the digital lives of autistic young people. Based on research with more than sixty neurodivergent children from an array of racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds, Kids Across the Spectrums delves into three overlapping areas of their media usage: cultural belonging, social relationships, and physical embodiment.
Alpers work demonstrates that what autistic youth do with technology is not radically different from their non-autistic peers. However, significant social and health inequalitiesincluding limited recreational programs, unsafe neighborhoods, and challenges obtaining appropriate therapeutic servicesspill over into their media habits. With an emphasis on what autistic children bring to media as opposed to what they supposedly lack socially, Alper argues that their relationships do not exist outside of how communication technologies affect sociality, nor beyond the boundaries of stigmatization and society writ large. Finally, she offers practical suggestions for the education, healthcare, and technology sectors to promote equity, inclusion, access, and justice for autistic kids at home, at school, and in their communities.
In spite of widespread assumptions that young people on the autism spectrum have a natural attraction to technologya premise that leads to significant speculation about how media helps or harms themrelatively little research actually exists about their everyday tech use. In Kids Across the Spectrums, Meryl Alper fills this gap with the first book-length ethnography of the digital lives of autistic young people. Based on research with more than sixty neurodivergent children from an array of racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic backgrounds, Kids Across the Spectrums delves into three overlapping areas of their media usage: cultural belonging, social relationships, and physical embodiment.
Alpers work demonstrates that what autistic youth do with technology is not radically different from their non-autistic peers. However, significant social and health inequalitiesincluding limited recreational programs, unsafe neighborhoods, and challenges obtaining appropriate therapeutic servicesspill over into their media habits. With an emphasis on what autistic children bring to media as opposed to what they supposedly lack socially, Alper argues that their relationships do not exist outside of how communication technologies affect sociality, nor beyond the boundaries of stigmatization and society writ large. Finally, she offers practical suggestions for the education, healthcare, and technology sectors to promote equity, inclusion, access, and justice for autistic kids at home, at school, and in their communities.
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