1st Edition

Rethinking Autism with Dolto Syllable Soup

By Kathleen Saint-Onge Copyright 2024
    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    270 Pages
    by Routledge

    Rethinking Autism with Dolto takes up a principal legacy of Françoise Dolto’s immense project—her conviction that autism is a regression to the archaic.

    Dolto theorizes that the infant in utero, deep in dreams, is receptive to the audition of “phonemes” during the pre-conscious “archaic stage” of psychosexual maturation. That dream-work on words—an idiosyncratic prehistory at the onset of mental and emotional life—secures the unconscious circulation of affect and the ontogeny of thought long prior to speech, seeding associative thinking and facilitating self-regulation. Kathleen Saint-Onge uses the written work of four nonverbal autistic authors in seeking corroboration for Dolto’s formulations, finding thoughtful self-reflections that relate the experience of living in silence with relentless anxiety while relying on regression as a defence. Dolto’s unprecedented insights into the infant’s earliest learning carry formidable implications for autism interventions, and for primary language and literacy. At issue is an enduring susceptibility to archaic echoes—the haphazard, securing return of pre-invested phonemes—in communicative exchanges, including reading and writing.

    Rethinking Autism with Dolto considers unconscious processes as inherently reparative, heralding the responsibility education holds for human health, and supports a rethinking of autism that presumes competence. Readers are invited to new conversations in psychoanalysis, child development, education and linguistics through an exploration of the unconscious concomitants of first language acquisition.

    Preface

    Introduction

     

    PART ONE: ANALYSIS

    Preamble for Part One

    Chapter 1: Conservation

    Preliminary Words

    A.             Archaic

    B.             Affect

    C.             Anxiety

    D.             Environment

    Chapter 2: Circulation

    Preliminary Words

    A.             Third

    B.             Passivity

    C.             Regression

    D.             Symbolization

    Chapter 3: Presentification

    Preliminary Words

    A.             Phonemes

    B.             Traces

    C.             Witness

    D.             Exteriorization

    Summary for Part One

     

    PART TWO: EVIDENCE

    Preamble for Part Two

    Chapter 4: Primary Defence

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Regression

    B.    Anxiety

    Chapter 5: Auditory Influence

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Phonemes

    B.    Passivity

    Chapter 6: Resonant Experience

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Exteriorization

    B.    Witness

    Summary for Part Two

     

    PART THREE: PRACTICE

    Preamble for Part Three

    Chapter 7: Name—Awaiting Echoes

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Inscription

    B.    Reverberations

    Chapter 8: Library—(Re)finding Echoes

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Inscription

    B.    Reverberations

    Chapter 9: Transcription—Producing Echoes

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Inscription

    B.    Reverberations

    Chapter 10: Forest—Following Echoes

    Preliminary Words

    A.    Inscription

    B.    Reverberations

    Summary for Part Three

     

    CONCLUSION

    BIBLIOGRAPHY

    INDEX

     

    Biography

    Kathleen Saint-Onge is a researcher and educator originally from Québec, Canada. Interrogating the unconscious, affective roots of language, she earned her master’s and PhD from York University, Toronto. Her previous publications include Discovering Françoise Dolto: Psychoanalysis, Identity and Child Development (Routledge).