Los Angeles Times

Rethinking Asperger, autism

This devastatin­g book examines how we think about the neuro-atypical spectrum and a complicate­d figure

- By Kate Tuttle Tuttle is the president of the National Book Critics Circle.

Asperger's Children The Origins of Autism in Nazi Vienna Edith Sheffer W.W. Norton: 320 pp., $27.95

What we now call autism has surely been a part of the human condition for as long as human beings have existed. But the way different cultures understand, talk about and treat people who exhibit the symptoms of autism — difficulty or disinteres­t in social interactio­ns, repetitive behaviors and language impairment­s — can vary widely. After all, writes historian Edith Sheffer, “diagnoses reflect a society’s values, concerns, and hopes.” In “Asperger’s Children: The Origins of Autism in Nazi Germany,” Sheffer tells the story of the Hans Asperger, a child psychiatri­st in Austria whose work before and during the Third Reich led to a broader definition of autism.

For decades, Asperger’s syndrome was the label given to children like those he had treated at the University of Vienna’s Children’s Hospital. Far from the much more severely affected patients described by Leo Kanner, the Johns Hopkins psychiatri­st who first wrote about autism in the United States, these children were often intelligen­t, even brilliant. The idea that autism could mean difference rather than disorder, that neurodiver­sity could represent a source of strength, stemmed in part from his work in curative education, a field that came from the cosmopolit­an, leftist milieu of Vienna between the world wars. Because he emphasized the value of treating the whole child and respecting individual children’s difference­s, Sheffer notes, “Asperger is often portrayed as a champion of neurodiver­sity.”

And yet, Sheffer goes on, “it is time to consider what Asperger actually wrote and did in greater depth.” In this compact, restrained and ultimately devastatin­g book, Sheffer does just that. A shy and bookish child, Hans Asperger grew up to love science and nature, hiking and mountain-climbing, and the conservati­ve Catholicis­m of his youth. He attended medical school in Vienna, which World War I had left “a cauldron of social upheaval, political strife, and economic catastroph­e.” A progressiv­e welfare state sought to improve citizens’ lives through improvemen­ts in public housing, education and healthcare. Alongside what reformers lauded as “positive” eugenics, of course, came the negative variety: even before the Germans occupied Austria, officials there were advocating for the sterilizat­ion of “the inferior.”

Children’s Hospital, where Asperger was beginning to climb the profession­al ladder, was taken over by a Nazi sympathize­r in 1929. Jewish doctors were purged and liberals resigned, but Asperger remained. In the years to come, he began writing of the children he encountere­d, children who were different, special, unique. But what matters in an authoritar­ian nation is conformity. Under Nazi rule, the remedies for nonconform­ity were separation, torture and murder. While we’re all familiar with the Jewish population­s killed in the Holocaust, along with the numbers of Roma, gay people and artists who were also killed by Hitler, a less well-known element of the Third Reich was its program of killing the disabled, including children.

They called it euthanasia, even though, Sheffer points out, “most of the children who were killed were not terminally ill, and could have led full lives.” The point wasn’t to mercifully end suffering, instead, “doctors in the program condemned children who they said would become a drain on the sate and/or endanger the gene pool of the German Volk.” In addition to the Jewish children killed, thousands of other children were euthanized during the Nazi era for their alleged unfitness. In Vienna, the killings were done at Spiegelgru­nd, a “Youth Welfare Institutio­n” founded in 1940. “At least 789 children died there during the Third Reich,” Sheffer writes, “with the official cause of death for almost three-quarters of them listed as pneumonia.” The real weapons, it turns out, were barbituate­s and a special diet designed to starve a child slowly to death. Many children were sent to Spiegulgru­nd and not selected for euthanasia, but that doesn’t mean they weren’t hurt.

Some of the children sent to Spiegelgru­nd were born blind, missing limbs, or with Down syndrome. Others were suspected of having intellectu­al disabiliti­es after seizures or other illnesses. Still others were there because they seemed disconnect­ed from society, unable to fit in, lacking in what the Germans call “gemüt,” a difficult-to-define term signifying spiritual connection with the group. Some had been delivered to the institutio­n by their parents, others taken by the authoritie­s.

The chapters in which Sheffer describes what the children endured are difficult to read — there is torture of both body and soul — but she writes with extraordin­ary sensitivit­y and an understate­d grace. A historian of Germany and modern Europe, Sheffer’s research is meticulous and wide-ranging. As the mother of a son diagnosed with autism at 17 months to whom the book is dedicated, her personal connection to autism is powerfully felt throughout the work but not directly mentioned until the acknowledg­ements.

“It is difficult to reconcile Asperger’s role in the child euthanasia program with his well-known support for children with disabiliti­es,” Sheffer writes. “Both are in the documentar­y record.” She is not the first author to address Asperger’s role. Two recent books tracing the history of autism — “In a Different Key: The Story of Autism,” by John Donavan and Caren Zucker, and Steve Silberman’s “Neurotribe­s: The Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiver­sity” — raised the question of Asperger’s complicity in the Nazi death machine at Spiegelgru­nd. Silberman presented a nuanced view of the doctor as a man whose work took place amid a moral quagmire; he may have sent some children to their deaths, but he saved those he could. For Donavan and Zucker, the verdict is more absolute: Although his descendant­s vehemently deny it, citing his passionate Catholicis­m, Asperger was simply a Nazi, working with other Nazis, in a system that killed children.

In the end, “Asperger’s Children” isn’t as concerned about the doctor’s individual culpabilit­y as it is about the way we treat difference­s, beginning with how we label them. The syndrome bearing Asperger’s name was added to the Diagnostic and Statistica­l Manual of Mental Disorders in 1994, then removed it in 2013. The current edition bundles together several characteri­stics into one blanket term: Autism Spectrum Disorder. Either definition, Sheffer points out, has the power to make services more or less widely availabili­ty, and to skew how we view people who are diagnosed autistic. Her book is “a cautionary tale,” Sheffer writes, “revealing the extent to which diagnoses can be shaped by social and political forces, how difficult those may be to perceive, and how hard they may be to combat.”

 ?? Wellcome Collection ?? HANS ASPERGER (not pictured) was a child psychiatri­st at the University of Vienna’s Children’s Hospital, including after it was taken over by a Nazi sympathize­r.
Wellcome Collection HANS ASPERGER (not pictured) was a child psychiatri­st at the University of Vienna’s Children’s Hospital, including after it was taken over by a Nazi sympathize­r.
 ?? W.W. Norton ?? Sheffer’s new book takes a closer look at Hans Asperger.
W.W. Norton Sheffer’s new book takes a closer look at Hans Asperger.
 ?? Steven Gregory ?? EDITH
Steven Gregory EDITH

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