TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘Sensory highs’, ‘vivid rememberings’ and ‘interactive stimming’
T2 - Children’s play cultures and experiences of friendship in autistic autobiographies
AU - Conn, Carmel
PY - 2015/9/23
Y1 - 2015/9/23
N2 - Children’s play is a principal site for the construction of disability, and this is particularly the case for autistic children. Investigation of children’s own perspectives in play provides information about the interests, concerns and meanings that are being produced in play and provides insight into what is valuable in children’s play and children’s skills as players. Autobiographies produced by autistic writers often include descriptions of enjoyable leisure activities and playful encounters with others the writer experienced as a child. Using thematic analysis, this study identifies patterns of experience in autistic autobiographies in relation to childhood play and friendship. Strongly sensory experiences of play, forms of pretending that involve orderly and predictable representations of real life, vividly remembered details of external sources and particular ways of interacting with playmates were found to be shared features of autistic play cultures.
AB - Children’s play is a principal site for the construction of disability, and this is particularly the case for autistic children. Investigation of children’s own perspectives in play provides information about the interests, concerns and meanings that are being produced in play and provides insight into what is valuable in children’s play and children’s skills as players. Autobiographies produced by autistic writers often include descriptions of enjoyable leisure activities and playful encounters with others the writer experienced as a child. Using thematic analysis, this study identifies patterns of experience in autistic autobiographies in relation to childhood play and friendship. Strongly sensory experiences of play, forms of pretending that involve orderly and predictable representations of real life, vividly remembered details of external sources and particular ways of interacting with playmates were found to be shared features of autistic play cultures.
KW - autistic play cultures
KW - social model of childhood disability
KW - children's perspectives
KW - autobiography
U2 - 10.1080/09687599.2015.1081094
DO - 10.1080/09687599.2015.1081094
M3 - Article
VL - 30
SP - 1192
EP - 1206
JO - Disability and Society
JF - Disability and Society
SN - 0968-7599
IS - 8
ER -