Supporting Autistic Culture in Defining Autistic Identity
Beaulieu, Gerald
Late diagnosed Autistic adults who are also practicing artists are very likely to have clues about their identities expressed in their work. This gives them the opportunity to reevaluate their meaning through a more accurate lens and proper context. It also challenges viewers and audiences to do the same and to confront misconceptions. These biases are likely to extend across all forms of cultural production. This leaves Autistic and disabled artists with a very small and unrecognized footprint in our current cultural landscape. This needs to be rectified by rejecting outmoded stereotypes and establishing committed programs of engagement with Autistic culture by our public institutions.
Additional Details
Date: January 10, 2025
Identifier: 4c3c8050-62ce-40f2-94da-aab33a875f56
Date: January 10, 2025
Text EnglishSubjects: Identity, Culture, Disability, Adult, Diagnosis, Arts, Stereotypes
Additional Information
Relation: 2563-9226
Rights: Copyright (c) 2021 Gerald Beaulieu
Format: text/html
Publication Title: Canadian Journal of Autism Equity
Notes: At the time of adding this record, articles from the journal had unreliable DOIs. We preferred adding typical URLs to the source field https://doi.org/10.15173/cjae.v1i1.4983