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Articles

Autism across cultures: rethinking autism

Pages 535-545 | Received 22 Feb 2011, Accepted 08 Jun 2011, Published online: 22 Mar 2012
 

Abstract

Whereas the autism prevalence rate has been very closely monitored in the United States, the same has not been observed in many other countries. This may be attributed to the fact that each culture views and defines autism differently. Using field notes and semi-structured interviews with family members with an individual with autism, teachers, and professionals in Canada, Nicaragua, and Korea, this paper illustrates how autism is socially differently constructed in these distinctively different cultures. Observing and experiencing what autism means in different cultures urge us to accept and appreciate individual differences or ‘differ-bilities’ in the diverse twenty-first century.

Notes

1. This and all other names are pseudonyms.

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