Laurie, Marcia et Joey, le petit garçon "mécanique" : trois enfants autistiques enfermés dans leur forteresse vide, figés dans leur mutisme et leur monde fantasmatique. Trois enfants parmi d'autres qui sont tenus pour incurables, avec lesquels Bruno Bettelheim et son équipe ont tenté d'entrer en communication - on verra au prix de quels efforts et de quels aléas. C'est donc moins l'histoire de cas qui nous est ici rapportée que celle d'une aventure méthodique : la recherche patiente et passionnée d'une rencontre, là où l'importance de ce que l'on appelle trop vite la régression paraît l'interdire à jamais.On trouvera, encadrant ces trois bouleversantes observations illustrées de dessins et de photographies, une analyse critique de la littérature psychiatrique sur l'autisme infantile, l'exposé des vues théoriques de l'auteur sur la constitution du "Soi" et une discussion du mythe des enfants sauvages.
Bruno Bettelheim (1903-1990) was an Austrian-born American child psychologist and writer. He gained an international reputation for his views on autism and for his claimed success in treating emotionally disturbed children.
If he were not already dead, I would be sorely tempted to remedy the situation. As it is, I yearn to dig him up from his grave so I can hit him over the head with my shovel post-mortem.
This book is so severely outdated, that it has become interesting and important again. Have you ever heard about this old school in psychology and psychiatry that deducted all psychiatric problems people have in their life from their early experience? That school that linked autism to the way parents _thought_ about their kids while they were pregnant; from they way they _looked_ at them when they were one month old? Well - that's the book! Autism meets psychoanalysis.
Since then this "theory" was debunked entirely and completely, but before it happened thousands of parents were taught to think that all the problems their kids have are their, parents' fault. And thousands of kids were taught to hate their parents for incorrect nursing and potty training that allegedly screwed their lives forever.
That's a great book if you need to feel a bit of righteous anger. And a very important historical source.
Fascinating and contoversial book on autism. Bettelheim uses three case studies of autistic children in his clinic's care to discuss largely the nurture part of the equation when it comes to autism. Sounds kind of dry, doesn't it? I couldn't put it down.
Si bien no he leido otras textos sobre la mima problemática lo considero, dentro de un determinado abordaje ( psicoanaltico por cierto) como un estudio exhaustivo de esta problemática sobre la cual si duda no está todo dicho. Es un texto para mi apasionante, con rigor científico y por momentos sumamente conmovedor..
I read this book because I am doing research for the historical fiction that I am currently writing. The book is pure garbage written by a charlatan. However, it has historical value, and is important for anyone writing about when the medical community believed that poor parenting caused autism.
Been meaning to read it for a while. How somebody could be so dense and yet so perceptive about people at the same time- like most people- is frustratingly true.
No sé que valor científico tengan los postulados de Bettelheim, pero es un testimonio de su paciencia y devoción a los niños autistas. El último apartado donde compara con Piaget, es muy interesante.