Boy alone : a brother's memoir
著者
書誌事項
Boy alone : a brother's memoir
HarperCollins, c2009
大学図書館所蔵 件 / 全2件
-
該当する所蔵館はありません
- すべての絞り込み条件を解除する
注記
Bibliography: p. [351]-355
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Karl Taro Greenfeld's brother Noah was not like other babies. He couldn't crawl, he couldn't speak, he had trouble making eye contact and interacting with his family members. Karl knew his brother wasn't normal and his parents knew something was wrong with their younger son but no one - not doctors, specialists, or social workers - could say what exactly was the problem with Noah. As Noah got older, his differences became more pronounced. He never developed the skills of self-sufficiency that other children learn, and as a young boy he was unable to tie his own shoes, use the toilet, or verbally communicate. Noah also became prone to violence, both towards himself and others. He spat and clawed at eyes and pulled hair, and as he grew older he began to inflict physical harm on himself by scratching, hitting himself, and endlessly banging his head against hard surfaces. Noah's parents, Josh Greenfeld and Foumiko Kometani, dedicated their lives to caring for their boy.
But "Boy Alone" is not the story of Noah; it is the story Karl, who spent his childhood and his life in the shadow of autism, tending to the needs of a disabled sibling while trying to determine his own needs and his own path. "Boy Alone" is an examination of two lives - Karl's and Noah's - and an investigation into what 'a life' really means. Can consciousness exist without self-consciousness? Can consciousness exist without language? What caused Noah's autism and can the effects be reversed? At the same time, the family of an autistic child is forced to confront more practical questions of existence: how do aging parents care for a nonverbal, often violent grown man? Of all the methods for 'dealing with' autism-multivitamin therapy, Operant Conditioning, Facilitation, Behaviorism, Freudian psychoanalyses, mainstreaming-is there anything that can be done to help an autistic child or adult become a member of mainstream society?
「Nielsen BookData」 より