Invisible Autistic Infrastructure: Ethnographic Reflections on an Autistic Community
Cara Ryan Idriss
Abstract
In this article, I provide an ethnographic account of an autistic-run community for adults in a North American city. By spending time with each other in loosely structured social interactions, members of this group participate in the ongoing construction of a complex and necessary social infrastructure in the face of often inadequate social and material support from their personal networks, and the larger society in which they live. The work this community does remains largely invisible because it runs counter to dominant biomedical understandings of autism and exists outside of the autism treatment industry.
Topics & Concepts
AutismEthnographyFace (sociological concept)SociologyPsychologyGender studiesPublic relationsSocial psychologySocial scienceDevelopmental psychologyPolitical scienceAnthropologyAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityBehavioral and Psychological Studies