ABSTRACT

Drawing together an international range of psychoanalytic practitioners, this collection provides a critique of mainstream models of autism, looking at the conceptual and ideological underpinnings of the behavioural and cognitive approaches popular today.

The first book to provide a psychoanalytic unpacking of standard non-analytic approaches, it offers a series of critical essays on mainstream assumptions, examining their history, foundations, and validity from a variety of angles. The authors consider, from the Lacanian perspective, the hypothesis of the biological-genetic causality of autism, as well as the claims of these approaches to offer effective therapy. These discussions are historically contextualised by an introduction and afterword that also provide pointers and references to further reading on Lacanian approaches to autism.

Illustrated throughout by clinical examples, Treating Autism Today will be of interest to Lacanian clinicians and scholars, as well as psychotherapists, psychologists, and those working with children diagnosed as being on the autistic spectrum.

chapter |12 pages

Treating autism today

Lacanian perspectives

chapter 1|12 pages

Autism in the neoliberal age

Some reflections 1

chapter 2|17 pages

The lessons of autism

chapter 3|17 pages

Like the monotonous voice of the gusle

Some reflections on autism 1

chapter 4|18 pages

Autists, practitioners, and institutions

The abuse of reductionism 1

chapter 6|9 pages

Psychoanalysis for autisms

chapter 8|11 pages

Autism

The French debate

chapter |10 pages

Afterword

What is the place of psychoanalysis in the treatment of autism today?