何も話さず、何も見ないエリー。
そのエリーが母から言葉を学び、人とコミュニケーションを取る方法を学び
驚くべき成長を遂げていく姿が細かく記録されていました。
自閉症児に「何が出来ないか」ということについてはよく知られていますが、
この本では「なぜ出来ないのか」について、詳しく書かれていました。
自閉症に対する理解を深めるのに大変役立つと思います。
登場するエリーは著者自身のお子さんです。
我が子に対する忍耐力・理解力。
専門医ではなく、母がここまでやり遂げてしまうということに深い感銘を受けました。
私の一番のお薦めです。
¥7,785¥7,785 税込
配送料 ¥250 6月6日-7日にお届け
発送元: おもちゃ鑑定団 (Toys & Books) 販売者: おもちゃ鑑定団 (Toys & Books)
¥7,785¥7,785 税込
配送料 ¥250 6月6日-7日にお届け
発送元: おもちゃ鑑定団 (Toys & Books)
販売者: おもちゃ鑑定団 (Toys & Books)
¥840¥840 税込
配送料 ¥297 5月26日-29日にお届け
発送元: ブックサプライ江坂DC 販売者: ブックサプライ江坂DC
¥840¥840 税込
配送料 ¥297 5月26日-29日にお届け
発送元: ブックサプライ江坂DC
販売者: ブックサプライ江坂DC
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自閉症児エリーの記録 単行本 – 1995/7/1
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購入オプションとあわせ買い
- 本の長さ386ページ
- 言語日本語
- 出版社河出書房新社
- 発売日1995/7/1
- ISBN-104309230342
- ISBN-13978-4309230344
商品の説明
内容(「MARC」データベースより)
世界中の同じ悩みを持つお母さんに、勇気をもって生きてほしいという願いから、娘エリーの成長過程と自閉症との闘いの日々をつづり、母親の役割の重大さを訴えた感動の書。「ひとりぼっちのエリー」の改題新装版。
登録情報
- 出版社 : 河出書房新社 (1995/7/1)
- 発売日 : 1995/7/1
- 言語 : 日本語
- 単行本 : 386ページ
- ISBN-10 : 4309230342
- ISBN-13 : 978-4309230344
- Amazon 売れ筋ランキング: - 1,281,065位本 (本の売れ筋ランキングを見る)
- カスタマーレビュー:
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他の国からのトップレビュー
Bobbie
5つ星のうち5.0
Readable, fascinating, moving, educational
2021年3月8日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
Subtitled A family’s journey into the world of an autistic child. “We would use every stratagem we could invent to assail her fortress, to beguile, entice, seduce her into the human condition.” Very slowly, feeling their way, they make amazing progress.
I should keep a note of what or who prompts me to buy books, because they go to the end of my TBR queue and, by the time they come up, I’ve forgotten the prompt. But whatever it was in this case, I’m really glad to have read it. I was employed one uni vacation in a children’s home for under 5s, whose little inmates broke my heart in a wide variety of ways, mostly through their neediness of the love they were variously lacking. When I got cuddly with one of them, I was called to the office, where I was told to stop cuddling as I would be gone in a few weeks. Under stern surveillance I stopped, causing more distress, I believe, than a loving goodbye would eventually have done. One child, a pretty, waiflike little blonde girl, sat apart every day on the grass, in her own world, rocking, showing no need of anything or anyone. No one ever engaged with her or spoke to her and I was told not to bother. Wrong. Wrong, Wrong.
I should keep a note of what or who prompts me to buy books, because they go to the end of my TBR queue and, by the time they come up, I’ve forgotten the prompt. But whatever it was in this case, I’m really glad to have read it. I was employed one uni vacation in a children’s home for under 5s, whose little inmates broke my heart in a wide variety of ways, mostly through their neediness of the love they were variously lacking. When I got cuddly with one of them, I was called to the office, where I was told to stop cuddling as I would be gone in a few weeks. Under stern surveillance I stopped, causing more distress, I believe, than a loving goodbye would eventually have done. One child, a pretty, waiflike little blonde girl, sat apart every day on the grass, in her own world, rocking, showing no need of anything or anyone. No one ever engaged with her or spoke to her and I was told not to bother. Wrong. Wrong, Wrong.
Stephanie Patterson
5つ星のうち5.0
A remarkable account
2013年2月16日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
This book, the story of one family’s attempt to break through what seems to them to be their child’s utter indifference to them, is remarkable both for the mother’s story of her own efforts to engage her child and for her account of her attempts to get help from a community of professionals who seem as baffled as she is by her child’s behavior.
Her progress with her daughter is very slow.. Elly ( the pseudonym for Jessica Park) makes progress at her own pace and she notices and responds to what interests her. She is very attentive to some details ( and has become a remarkable artist) but she is rarely attentive to people. I sometimes got impatient with the narrative but I think that was more indicative of my need for Elly to make more rapid and remarkable progress than it was of any flaw in the prose.
Clara Claiborne Park raised Elly during the era when the supposed etiology of autism was “the refrigerator mother,” a parent who did not want her child and whose demeanor conveyed this to the developing infant. (See Bruno Bettleheim’s “Joey the Mechanical Boy” for the full explanation of this most damaging of theories). Her discomfort at being judged for unnamed flaws is poignantly expressed: “Comfortable, well-educated members of the upper middle class ordinarily escape the experience of depersonalization, of utter helplessness in institutional hands, of reduction to the status of children to whom situations are mediated, not explained. Like so much that hurts, the experience is deeply educational. . We know now in our skins that the most threatening of all attacks is the attack on the sense of personal worth, that the harshest of all deprivations is the deprivation of respect. We know now, I think, how the slum mother feels as the welfare worker comes round the corner. It takes, one would think, so little knowledge of psychology to put oneself in another person's place.”
Attitudes toward autism and its etiology have changed dramatically, but this memoir, originally written in the 1960s is still well worth reading
Her progress with her daughter is very slow.. Elly ( the pseudonym for Jessica Park) makes progress at her own pace and she notices and responds to what interests her. She is very attentive to some details ( and has become a remarkable artist) but she is rarely attentive to people. I sometimes got impatient with the narrative but I think that was more indicative of my need for Elly to make more rapid and remarkable progress than it was of any flaw in the prose.
Clara Claiborne Park raised Elly during the era when the supposed etiology of autism was “the refrigerator mother,” a parent who did not want her child and whose demeanor conveyed this to the developing infant. (See Bruno Bettleheim’s “Joey the Mechanical Boy” for the full explanation of this most damaging of theories). Her discomfort at being judged for unnamed flaws is poignantly expressed: “Comfortable, well-educated members of the upper middle class ordinarily escape the experience of depersonalization, of utter helplessness in institutional hands, of reduction to the status of children to whom situations are mediated, not explained. Like so much that hurts, the experience is deeply educational. . We know now in our skins that the most threatening of all attacks is the attack on the sense of personal worth, that the harshest of all deprivations is the deprivation of respect. We know now, I think, how the slum mother feels as the welfare worker comes round the corner. It takes, one would think, so little knowledge of psychology to put oneself in another person's place.”
Attitudes toward autism and its etiology have changed dramatically, but this memoir, originally written in the 1960s is still well worth reading
Lois Huneycutt
5つ星のうち5.0
A lovely memoir about raising an autistic child fifty odd years ago
2019年7月18日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
I first read this book as a college student thinking about working with children with communication disabilities, and it was one of the best chronicles on child language acquisition I'd ever read. It is beautifully and sensitively written, and chronicles the real struggles that even an upper class family with plenty of education has getting diagnoses and answers when a child is developing atypically. The child "Elly" (whose real name is Jessica Parks), has grown up to be a talented artist who works in the mailroom at Williams College.
A. R. Morris
5つ星のうち5.0
H.A.R.P - Great Read - 4 Years After Purchasing
2019年2月3日に英国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
The original autism parents book, fighting back against the silly psychotherapy ideas around autism of the day. Park is a true heroine. - Antony Morris
E. Lehman
5つ星のうち5.0
A sensitive, well documented, fascinating, and very well written book!
2013年9月23日にアメリカ合衆国でレビュー済みAmazonで購入
While I have been trained to work with autistic children, I had never encountered such a thorough account of the first years of the life and uneven development of an autistic child. Clara Claiborne Park is an amazing observer, author, mother, and scientist in the way she analyzes the language problems and thinks of ways to work with them. This book should be read by any mother and father and professional dealing with an infant and preschooler who is not developing as 'normal'; those who have autistic children will recognize the behaviors and those who children are not autistic will be given a lot to observe and decide that that is not the direction of a non-autistic child. Either way, this book should be a helpful guide!