Despite the wide range and accessibility of digital image- making technologies, little attention has been paid to autistic people’s everyday photography. The aim of this article is to address this knowledge gap and investigate the ways in which photography enabled four autistic male adults to visually express their social world. Drawing on the writings of Merleau-Ponty and adopting an anthropological perspective to understand autism as a way of being, this article is positioned within the context of phenomenology and provides a more nuanced picture of who creates photographs, where, why, how often and for whom. Using a critical approach rooted in an understanding of everyday life that recognises the value of the banal, repetitive and unnoti...
The visual medium is central to how most of us navigate daily life and come to know and interact wit...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The article considers the “epistemology of everyday life”: since today the population objectifies t...
Digital photography is deeply embedded in people’s daily lives, as camera phones and digital compact...
Drawing on findings of a qualitative and exploratory study on the everyday photography of four young...
Photographs are created, recreated and shared extensively and repeatedly, suggesting that people hav...
This paper provides critical perspectives on how photography can be used as a form of visual communi...
Background: Research evidence suggests that self-understanding is likely to be limited in individua...
The current study aimed to explore the nature of self-understanding in adolescents diagnosed with an...
International audienceAutistic individuals are often described as thinking in pictures. The aim of t...
The article aims to analyze the importance of selfies as an emancipatory tool used by people with di...
In this chapter, Damian Milton explores the construction of autistic selfhood, and the fragmented se...
People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show atypical attention to social stimuli [1] and gaze at...
The purpose of this practical dissertation is to provide discussion on the place autism has in the w...
This paper arises out of a three-yearpost-doctoral, photography research project that is being carri...
The visual medium is central to how most of us navigate daily life and come to know and interact wit...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The article considers the “epistemology of everyday life”: since today the population objectifies t...
Digital photography is deeply embedded in people’s daily lives, as camera phones and digital compact...
Drawing on findings of a qualitative and exploratory study on the everyday photography of four young...
Photographs are created, recreated and shared extensively and repeatedly, suggesting that people hav...
This paper provides critical perspectives on how photography can be used as a form of visual communi...
Background: Research evidence suggests that self-understanding is likely to be limited in individua...
The current study aimed to explore the nature of self-understanding in adolescents diagnosed with an...
International audienceAutistic individuals are often described as thinking in pictures. The aim of t...
The article aims to analyze the importance of selfies as an emancipatory tool used by people with di...
In this chapter, Damian Milton explores the construction of autistic selfhood, and the fragmented se...
People with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) show atypical attention to social stimuli [1] and gaze at...
The purpose of this practical dissertation is to provide discussion on the place autism has in the w...
This paper arises out of a three-yearpost-doctoral, photography research project that is being carri...
The visual medium is central to how most of us navigate daily life and come to know and interact wit...
An analysis of the social research done to date using photographs shows that photography, although u...
The article considers the “epistemology of everyday life”: since today the population objectifies t...