The Autism History Project
The Autism History Project is a website that profiles people, topics, and ideas that shaped autism throughout the twentieth century. It also presents an archive of sources to illustrate that history. It is for everyone interested in autism as well as anyone interested in medicine and the human sciences, health and social welfare, development and disability, and the history of children and families in the modern United States.
Autism, Between Rights and Risks
Adjudicating rights and managing risks have been two of the most important responsibilities of government in modern U.S. history. Since 1945, the expansion of rights claims and the multiplication of risk designations have coincided. This project probes that coincidence by considering the case of autism. Today designated as a developmental disability, autism’s key characteristic—disconnection—challenges the sociability that grounds secure personhood and civic belonging. Autism therefore illuminates the boundaries of the human as well as the rights of citizens. This research project explores the following themes: autism and the campaign to measure, predict, and control developmental risks; autism as a controversial and increasingly prevalent clinical entity; autism as the basis for advocacy movements; autism and the right to education and early intervention; neurodiversity and democracy. Autism illustrates how risk itself became a legitimate basis for political mobilization, collective identification, and rights claims.
During 2011-2012, this research project was supported by a Fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.
PAST RESEARCH
Kinship by Design
Kinship by Design: A History of Adoption in the Modern United States was published by the University of Chicago Press in Fall 2008. The book considers the history of child adoption during the twentieth century as a case study of social engineering, or kinship by design. The historical claim of kinship by design has been as simple as it has been ambitious: to reduce uncertainty and increase certainty in family formation. Kinship by design promised to inject safety, naturalness, and authenticity into a family form culturally marked as hazardous, artificial, and less real than the “real thing.” The book covers a range of efforts to regulate the adoption process as well as study and help members of adoptive families. It suggests that the adoption story has as much to tell us about the history of the welfare state, scientific authority, and therapeutic culture as it does about childhood, family life, and other experiences we classify as “private.”
The Adoption History Project
The Adoption History Project highlights the people, organizations, topics, and studies that shaped child adoption in theory and practice during the twentieth century in the United States. The website includes numerous sketches, images, document excerpts, and bibliographic resources. It emerged out of work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0094318, and was supported at the beginning by a small grant from Project ECHO, Center for History and New Media, George Mason University. Design assistance was provided by the Wired Humanities Project at the University of Oregon. During the 2004-2005 year, expansion of the website was supported by a grant from the Viola W. Bernard Foundation.
The Romance of American Psychology
Psychological insight is the creed of our time, one in which even the most cynical believe. A quiet academic discipline two generations ago, psychology has become a voice of great cultural authority. From family structure to government policy, child abuse to urban violence, few social institutions or political issues in the United States remain untouched by the wisdom of psychological “experts.” Psychology tells us who we are and who we can hope to become. The Romance of American Psychology explores how, and why, this fledgling science became the source of the most potent ideology in contemporary culture. The book tells the story of this country’s love affair with the behavioral sciences.
Psychiatry, Psychology, and Homosexuality
The pressure to be “normal” weighs heavily on all of us, perhaps nowhere more powerfully than on gay men and lesbians. Since psychiatrists and psychiatrists became more numerous and gained authority during the 1940s, their expert opinions have shaped views of homosexuality in the United States. Until 1973, the American Psychiatric Association classified homosexuality as a mental illness, originating in family pathology or “arrested development” and leading to a loveless life. During the postwar decades, activists responded by developing gay-friendly psychological perspectives and defining homophobia as the problem. This book charts the love-hate relationship between mental health professionals and rapidly changing gay communities.