“As per the terrorist narrative, the story of autism is told as a kind of 'spreading' pathology, infiltrating normative populations .. Knowing no borders or barriers, autism is framed as .. infiltrating homes, moving next door, and hiding in otherwise normative bodies. Figures of terror, in Bush's words, 'hide in the shadows' (Bush, 2001). Says the voice of autism in Cuaron's film [I am Autism]: they are 'invisible until it's too late' (Cuaron, 2009).” AutismAutism AwarenessDisability Studies Book:War on Autism: On the Cultural Logic of Normative Violence Source: War on Autism: On the Cultural Logic of Normative Violence
“Beloved children split in two. A child-with: part child, part autism. A part to love and a part to hate. A part to cultivate and a part to eliminate.. Such cultural orientation did not force [Karen] McCarron's .. hand in killing her child, but it nonetheless provides the necessary conditions .. to make this kind of violence possible and even—for those of us monitoring the headlines—normal.” AutismAutism AwarenessDisability Studies Book:War on Autism: On the Cultural Logic of Normative Violence Source: War on Autism: On the Cultural Logic of Normative Violence