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When Popular Novels Perpetuate Negative Stereotypes: Mark Haddon, Asperger's and Irresponsible Fiction

Posted: 11/18/11 02:00 PM ET

A celebrated novelist decrees that "imagination always trumps research." A father of a boy with Asperger's disagrees.

_______________________________________


The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time, Mark Haddon's debut novel, was the sort of mammoth best-seller writers dream of, a work that garnered both near-universal critical acclaim and enormous commercial success.

It was the Whitbread Book of the Year for 2003, a New York Times Notable Book, and an entry on countless end-of-year best-of lists. "Original and affecting," said The New Yorker. "Clever and observant," gushed The Washington Post. "Funny, sad, and totally convincing," added Time.

Curious Incident has sold more than two million copies, and continues to fly off the shelves. It is a staple of book clubs. It is widely taught in schools. A film adaptation is in development.

If there is a contemporary canon, Curious Incident is in it.

I read the novel early in 2006, on the recommendation of a writer friend, but I wasn't impressed by it. To me, Curious Incident is a gimmick novel -- a well-conceived one, perhaps, but a gimmick novel just the same -- and one hindered by a lame third act. When I finished, I filed it on my bookshelf and forgot all about it.

At the time, my son was 18 months old. He'd not yet been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome.

* * *


The novel's appeal lies in its 15-year-old narrator, Christopher John Francis Boone, whom Slate lauded as "[o]ne of the strangest and most convincing characters in recent fiction."

Boone describes himself as "a mathematician with some behavioural difficulties," but despite this stylistic obfuscation, we're not left to guess at his diagnosis. Early book jackets made explicitly clear that he has Asperger's syndrome.

As an official medical diagnosis, Asperger's is relatively new. It was first included in the fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, in 1994, just nine years before Haddon's novel was published.

Curious Incident may not have been the first work of fiction ever written on the subject, but it was certainly the first "Asperger's novel" to achieve widespread notice. It introduced me to the term. Christopher John Francis Boone, Haddon's "most convincing" narrator, was the first "aspie" I knew.

* * *


My son is now six and a half. In the three years since his diagnosis, I've learned quite a bit about Asperger's and autistic spectrum disorder, both from personal observation and diligent research. And I've come to see what an inaccurate picture of Asperger's Curious Incident paints.

Asperger's tends to be a relatively mild form of autistic spectrum disorder. Most aspies are "high-functioning." They don't refuse to go to school if they spy a yellow car, or curl up into a whimpering ball on a train because there are too many people around, as Boone does in Curious Incident.

Indeed, if Christopher John Francis Boone has Asperger's, as we've been led to believe, he has one of the most extreme forms of the disorder ever recorded.

Although there are those on the autistic spectrum who found Haddon's portrayal of Asperger's on base -- William Schofield, then a student at a London college for aspies, wrote in The Guardian that "the similarities are very convincing between Chris and me especially, in my opinion" -- it is telling that many of Curious Incident's 73 one-star Amazon reviews (there are a staggering 1,720 reviews in all, most fours and fives) were submitted by aspies. Here's a smattering:

"Stereotyped, inaccurate, horribly offensive... this isn't how it is." "Haddon does not understand Asperger." "Stereotypical view of an autistic child." "I find it hard to believe that Mark Haddon is an autism expert, because Christopher Boone isn't like any other child with Asperger's that I've ever met." "A major disservice to the Autistic Community." "An excellent portrayal of autism...NOT!"

The aspie reviewers, as it happens, were onto something. Haddon, by his own admission, is clueless about Asperger's. "I know very little about the subject," he confessed on his website, in an blog posted on July 16, 2009. "I did no research for Curious Incident... I'd read Oliver Sacks's essay about Temple Grandin and a handful of newspaper and magazine articles about, or by, people with Asperger's and autism. I deliberately didn't add to this list."

Then he added: "Imagination always trumps research. I thought that if I could make Christopher real to me then he'd be real to readers....Judging by the reaction, it seems to have worked."

Oh, it worked, all right. But at what cost?

* * *


In 1989, Rain Man won the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Leading Role (Dustin Hoffman), Best Original Screenplay (Barry Morrow and Ronald Bass), Best Director (Barry Levinson), and Best Picture.

The character of Raymond Babbitt is based on Kim Peek, a man capable of astounding feats of mathematics and memory. Posthumously diagnosed with Opitz-Kaveggia syndrome, Peek had no corpus callosum connecting the two halves of his brain.

In the film, Babbitt is called an autistic savant...but the real Kim Peek was not autistic.
Nevertheless, Rain Man became the popular culture's introduction to autism.

Thirty years later, the belief persists that autistics can reliably count a pile of toothpicks at a glance. This is a powerful negative stereotype that autistic children (and their parents) must overcome.

* * *


Six years after the release of Curious Incident, Haddon, curiously, began to back away from Boone's book-jacket Asperger's diagnosis. "Curious Incident is not a book about Asperger's," he wrote on his blog. "It's a novel whose central character describes himself as 'a mathematician with some behavioural difficulties'. Indeed he never uses the words 'Asperger's' or 'autism' (I slightly regret that fact that the word 'Asperger's' was used on the cover)."

Was his regret only "slight" because he knew that without those magic words on the cover, the book might not have sparked as much interest, or sold as many copies?

More importantly, why did it take six years for Haddon to recant? Was he (belatedly) empathizing with the Asperger's community, the writers of those 73 one-star reviews, who now must deal with Christopher John Francis Boone as their pop-cultural representative? Had he awakened to the dangers of irresponsible fiction? Wherefore his dramatic reversal?

No. He wanted to explain, once and for all, why he always turned down requests from autism awareness groups. "Unsurprisingly," Haddon explained, "I'm often asked to talk about Asperger's and autism or to become involved with organisations who work on behalf of people with Asperger's and autism, many of whom do wonderful work. But I always decline, for two reasons: 1) I know very little about the subject...2) Curious Incident is not a book about Asperger's."

Curious Incident is not a book about Asperger's? Sure -- and Moby Dick is not a book about a whale.

* * *


I don't begrudge Haddon his freedom of speech, or his ability to make a living as a man of letters. He can write about whatever he pleases. What I find objectionable is that he seems unaware of -- or, worse, indifferent toward -- the fact that he has made both his name and his fortune exploiting the Asperger's community, my son included. After all, if his aim were to present an honest portrayal of the disorder, his research would have involved more than skimming an essay about Temple Grandin, who isn't even an aspie.

It may be that Haddon did not set out to create a character with a specific DSM diagnosis; Schofield, in his Guardian essay, suggests as much. It may be that Haddon wasn't responsible for the words "Asperger's Syndrome" appearing on the back cover of his novel; publishers, not authors, usually have the final say on book jacket copy. It may be that Haddon didn't intend to negatively stereotype those with Asperger's; Morrow, the Rain Man screenwriter, who gave his Academy Award statue to Kim Peek, certainly did not intend to negatively stereotype autistics.

But the fact remains: Haddon did write an Asperger's character, he did take advantage of the words "Asperger's Syndrome" in his marketing campaign, and knowingly or not, he did create a negative stereotype. And if he felt anything but indifference toward this literary exploitation after the fact, he would not have used the same narrator-with-relatively-rare-psychological-disorder gimmick in his follow-up novel, as he did with 2006's A Spot of Bother, replacing Asperger's with hypochrondria.

In any case, the damage is done. Christopher John Francis Boone is to Asperger's what Raymond Babbitt is to autism. And aspies everywhere -- including my son -- must now live with it.

 
 
 

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jhNY
Mercy.
01:46 PM on 11/21/2011
I've read the book, and I liked it all right, not as a scrupulous portrayal of a specific diagnosis, but as a good story built around its narrator's exhaustive powers of observation and adamant preference for order. Hopefully, many readers recognized this book's title as an homage to Sherlock Holmes-- the boy, as much as anything else, is a very good detective. Ironically, given present concerns, it was lent to me by the mother of a boy who had been diagnosed as being 'on the spectrum'. She thought it was insightful enough to recommend it.

"It may be that Haddon wasn't responsible for the words "Asperger's Syndrome" appearing on the back cover of his novel; publishers, not authors, usually have the final say on book jacket copy"--- there's your problem. Book jacket blurbs are not written by authors, and authors, especially first-time authors, have little to no say about blurb content. It's hard to accept all your outrage for the author's doings, when most of it is centered on the book jacket, over which, again, the author likely had no control.
12:29 PM on 11/21/2011
I admit that I haven't read the book, but my mother is an occupational therapist and her talk about her work has lead me to research autism spectrum disorders very thoroughly, and to keep up with pending research, discoveries, and treatments. Based on the portrayal of the protagonist's behavior as outlined in this article, I completely agree - what's described seem to be autism, not Asperger's, and to confuse the two or to perpetuate the assumption that anyone ANYWHERE on the spectrum is automatically non-functional is a very dangerous myth. I heartily approve of the author drawing attention to the distinction.
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c-tom
Badges we don't need no stinking badges
12:28 PM on 11/21/2011
Isn't Sherlock Holmes a character with Aspergers and didn't Doyle write long before Haddon.
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threnodymarch
Art is long, life is short.
10:22 AM on 11/21/2011
The only criticism I have of this piece is that I didn't feel like the writer gave examples of the negative stereotypes of those with Asperger's and how they relate to the real world. Yes, he mentioned the complaints of people with the disorder, but didn't cite research or life experiences that demonstrate how the negative stereotypes actually function in the world. Is there more discrimination now because of this book? How does negative stereotyping of Asperger's actually work in modern society? Is this disorder now being treated differently? How did this book change the conversation? What is a better way to portray those with Asperger's? He says that the case in the book is "extreme", but didn't adequately explain how that impacts anything. I kept saying to myself, "Yes, and?...."
08:44 AM on 11/21/2011
People know VERY LITTLE about Asperger's Syndrome; therefore, anything portraying a person with it should portray it accurately. I used to teach a young mad with Asperger's. He was very intelligent, worked dilligently, etc. But he also said exactly what was on his mind, lost his temper quite easily, and was quite volatile. I still keep in touch with him, 12 years later. He's doing quite well and has learned to control his negative behaviors. I am very proud of him.

I would hate for him to have been judged based on a false representation of this group of children as a whole.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
08:51 PM on 11/20/2011
As the father of a boy with Aspergers you are probably not the most objective judge of the book.

I would be more interested in the opinion of a person with Asperger's.

I have never read this book but as a teacher I have seen these kids. Most don't curl up into balls but they do act in unexpected and difficult ways.

Banning a book for portraying Asperger's in ways you don't like would be a step in the wrong direction.
03:43 PM on 11/20/2011
Missing the forest for the trees. I don't pick up a work of fiction on the merits of its (social, scientific, historical, etc.) accuracy. I have an admittedly layperson's knowledge of Aspergers, and assumed that a) it's a spectrum disease (impossible to embody in *one* character); b) the main character was also possibly autistic because of the sensory issues; c) the author used dramatic flourishes to create an engaging story. I didn't fixate on the diagnosis to 'get' the novel. Sure, I have oodles of righteous indignation for novelists who assume to represent the issues of (women, minorities, etc.) and do it badly. I prefer to shake my head and move on, because I know better.
08:46 PM on 11/19/2011
This posits -- inadvertently -- a really interesting question: If audiences use one character and project his/her qualities to everyone of the same illness, race, city of birth, etc., is that the fault of the audiences or the author?
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raggedhand
07:17 PM on 11/19/2011
OK, I read this critiques and I still don't know WHY Olear thinks the book doesn't portray Asperger's well. He just says it doesn't and then he castigates the author for not researching Asperger's more thoroughly. That's a legitimate opinion, but it's not supported in the review.
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methodman
10:35 AM on 11/19/2011
The other point is that now so many well documented teaching styles exist that everybody if they are willing to try to learn to word by word read instead of phrase read and practice forming their alphabet. can enjoy getting used to curious. because I thought I understood everything and discovered I could not follow any kind of process or engineering or policy making writing at all. So One semester from a grant I bought Music, Sequencing Corel's Painter, Corel Draw, Paintshop pro and Mathematica and Maple and boy was I going to learn that. What happened is I just studied the vocabulary and many other subjects became easier; however I still am clueless with Mathematica and Maple.. But all those other subjects I am able to compete with them. I saw the late Kim Peeks too He was very interesting I asked him if he was able to diagram a flow chart or understand a football game which he didn't do those things which is where I feel the most mercy is delivered is from flow charts and state variable study. I couldn't visualize lowering one of the sides for the process symbol for 3 years I finally saw what I couldn't see before.
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ringmaster
retired showman from Memphis, down in Dixie
10:34 AM on 11/19/2011
Fiction writers should be required to stick to the truth . Where is Lloyd T. Binford when we need him.
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methodman
10:18 AM on 11/19/2011
I am not sure I am against stereotypes for one thing like Archie Bunker they act as fodder. You should do a bit of background on the AArnes -Thompson catalogs of folklore it's kind of a Dewey Decimal System for folklore. Vladimir Propp and Georges Polti Together they give fodder so one doesn't have to use stereo types. However most people have to limit by evaluation to confine certain logical organizational blindnesses after all aren't stereotypes a form of logical organization? Also there is a subject basic English which uses 1000 words and 18 verbs. I am not sure how to research that I haven't tried it.
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amva55
09:33 AM on 11/19/2011
It is fiction and does not denigrate Asperger's Syndrome or Autism. Lighten up, be happy!
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Conuly
12:19 PM on 11/20/2011
But it creates a false and flawed impression of autistics in the minds of the readers. It's very annoying talking to people and having to spend several minutes trying to politely say "Everything you just said that you got from that book is totally wrong, and here's why".
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
01:37 PM on 11/20/2011
Do you think all sea captains are like Ahab?
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MountainPenelope
Hands off my micro-bio (& my Medicare)!
07:42 AM on 11/19/2011
It's fiction. Lighten up!
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
06:03 AM on 11/19/2011
Totally off base.

The idea of expecting any work, particularly based on one character, to perfectly illustrate the wide range of possibilities and characterizations that exist in a condition such as Aspberger's is wholly unrealistic.

And Moby Dick was not about a whale, actually.
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Sara Williams
08:50 AM on 11/19/2011
No, it's being assigned in schools as a legitimate depiction, but when I read it, I thought the kid had a very high-strung case of Autism. It's also damaging because Asperger's is still a new diagnosis, which only started being used in the '80s. It's still very much misunderstood, yet sensationalized by the media, which doesn't do a good job of separating it from regular Autism. For kids with Asperger's, it's an uphill battle getting their teachers at school to understand, especially the older ones.

I have family with Asperger's. I also tutored in classrooms with children who had it, one boy and one girl. The boy was a more severe case, given to hissy fits over little things. None of them were like the book.
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MissTake1989
Equal means equal, hypocrites.
11:16 AM on 11/19/2011
If a fire dept. chose to use Farhenheit 451 rather than a fire safety training manual...

Would you blame Ray Bradbury?

If this book does not depict Asperger's accurately, it's the teacher's job to provide context...not for the author to be a clinically trained physcologist.

I have Apsberger's. The idea that everyone who does could be neatly summed up in one character is silly...to say the least.