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A Past Still Present: Hans Asperger and neurodiversity webinar

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A Past Still Present Series

‘Does the Nazi persecution and murder of people with disability in the mid-twentieth century continue to echo in the present day?’

The Nazi killing of around 300,000 people with disability or chronic illness was rooted in a longer history of eugenic ideas. Today, there is debate about whether, or to what extent, these ideas were dismissed after the end of World War II or alternatively still influence attitudes to people with disability, including in the form of a covert (and sometimes overt) reluctance to recognise the human rights of people with disability.

Hans Asperger and neurodiversity

As soon as the Nazis annexed Austria, paediatrician Hans Asperger ingratiated himself to them. He praised their doctrines, joined their organisations, and created the autism diagnosis to capture those who did not conform to their regime. Within two years he was central to Austria’s experiments on and murders of disabled children. And yet, not only was he allowed to continue practicing, but for decades he was venerated as a saviour of disabled people under Nazism. This paper explores the conditions that made this possible, and their continuing relevance to autistic people in particular, and disabled people in general.

Amanda Tink is a PhD candidate at Western Sydney University’s Writing and Society Research Centre, researching Australian disabled authors and the Nazi genocide of disabled people. Her chapter ‘“If You’re Different Are You the Same?”: The Nazi Genocide of Disabled People and Les Murray’s Fredy Neptune’ appeared in Genocide Perspectives IV, and was shortlisted for the nonfiction category of the 2021 Woollahra Digital Literary Award. With Jessica White, she recently co-edited a special issue of Australian Literary Studies titled ‘Writing Disability in Australia’.


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