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Details
Condition: New
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9781760113643
Publisher: Allen & Unwin
Overview
NeuroTribes is Steve Silberman's landmark work of investigative journalism, tracing the hidden history of autism from its earliest clinical descriptions to today's neurodiversity movement. Winner of the 2015 Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction and shortlisted for the Wellcome Book Prize, this brand-new paperback edition carries a foreword by the late neurologist Oliver Sacks. A Sunday Times and New York Times bestseller, it remains one of the most acclaimed accounts of autism ever published, essential reading for anyone wanting to understand how society's view of neurological difference has evolved.
About the Book
Building on his groundbreaking Wired feature "The Geek Syndrome," Silberman spent years researching the scientists, families, and autistic people themselves whose stories shaped our understanding of autism. He uncovers how early clinicians such as Hans Asperger and Leo Kanner shaped, and sometimes obscured, the diagnostic criteria still used today, and why the number of diagnoses has risen so dramatically in recent decades. Rather than portraying autism purely as a deficit, Silberman frames it as a naturally occurring form of human cognitive variation with a long, largely unrecorded history. Weaving together rigorous historical research with intimate personal narratives, NeuroTribes gives voice to autistic individuals and their families across generations, while examining the social, educational, and medical systems that have supported — or failed — them. The book closes with a hopeful look at the growing neurodiversity movement and what a more inclusive future could look like for autistic people and the wider world.
About the Author
Steve Silberman is an award-winning investigative journalist who has covered science and culture for Wired and other national publications for more than two decades. His writing has also appeared in The New Yorker, Nature, and Wired's tech and culture pages, exploring subjects ranging from the Grateful Dead to the science of autism. NeuroTribes, his first full-length book, took him over a decade to research and write, drawing on interviews with scientists, clinicians, autistic self-advocates, and families spanning the history of autism research.
Why You'll Love This Book
Thoroughly researched yet compulsively readable, NeuroTribes reframes autism with compassion and clarity, making it a rewarding read for professionals and general readers alike, and a thoughtful gift for anyone touched by neurodiversity.
Please Note: Cover image shown may vary slightly from the UK edition received; ISBN and edition are as stated above.
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