Unmasking Autism

The Radical Power of Embracing Our Neurodiversity

Paperback, 304 pages

English language

Published Feb. 14, 2022 by Octopus Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-1-80096-055-8
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(40 reviews)

Have you, a friend or family member been living with undiagnosed autism?

For every visibly Autistic person you meet, there are countless ‘masked’ people who pass as neurotypical. They don’t fit the stereotypical mould of Autism and are often forced by necessity to mask who they are, spending their entire lives trying to hide their Autistic traits. In particular, there is evidence that Autism remains significantly undiagnosed in women, people of colour, trans and gender non-conforming people, many of whom are only now starting to recognise those traits later in life.

Blending cutting-edge research, personal insights and practical exercises for self-expression, Dr Devon Price examines the phenomenon of ‘masking’, making a passionate argument for radical authenticity and non-conformity. A powerful call for change, Unmasking Autism gifts its readers with the tools to uncover their true selves and build a new society – one where everyone can thrive on their own …

8 editions

Okay.

The book has some helpful info and is okay overall, though honestly it didn't do much for me personally - maybe because I spent a lot of time reading neurodivergent people's experiences and general info online before reading the book, so it felt a bit redundant. If you're new to the topic though, I think it might be a good starting point.

reviewed Unmasking Autism by Devon Price

A Research-Driven Exploration of Autism with Some Self-Help Sprinkled In

This is an excellent look at the vast range of experiences of autistic people and the masking behaviors people engage in to appear neurotypical to the world. Price examines the costs of this masking and describes strategies for both individual and systemic unmasking strategies. There's also great analysis of the medicalization of autism and the problems with "treatments" such as ABA. Highly recommend

Helpful Book

It was a very helpful read. To learn more about autism I started to read books and this one helped me immensely. It focuses on how autistic people mask and why they mask their autistic traits. Also, it explains why anyone who is not a "white, rich boy" has a hard time to get an official diagnosis even today. Also it comes with lots of helpful, handy exercises to put off the masks one has been wearing. Some parts of the book are a bit lot focused on the situation in the US - you may want to find data or statistics about your country-, yet, that's understandable given the author origin.

A book I wish it would be translated into > 50 languages

Radical and intriguing, this isn't the common book about Autism that you find in bookshelves, especially not written in languages other than English. This groundbreaking book, written by an Autistic and transgender author, is all about those hidden, 'masked' Autistics, especially from intersectionally marginalised populations, like Black, trans, women and other marginalised genders, and people with other disabilities on top.

Dr. Price takes a radical approach of harm reduction and social justice, identifying how much harm the ableist & capitalist society inflicts on Autistics (and on other neuro-divergent and disabled people, but really on everyone), forcing them into obscuring their disabilities, so that they can conform to 'normality' and function in an alienating, industrial society that punishes our quirks. The book helps neurodivergent people identifying their disability (seen from the social model of disability), and guides neuro-divergent people how they can actualise their own identity and identity their own values …

Review of 'Unmasking Autism' on 'Storygraph'

Just gave me a lot of hope and continues to inspire me to be a better person and understand my needs. This really helped change my mindset on how I think of myself as an autistic person, and I think any autistic or even allistic person should read this! 

Review of 'Unmasking Autism' on 'Goodreads'

A book that is best when it's doing what is supposed to be, and worst when it's trying to do something else. It's pitched as a guide to autistic masking and a way to review your own making habits, and when it's on task it is insightful and helpful, though it leans heavily on collective anecdote rather than the small but existing body of research on this area. Dr Price isn't that sort of doctor though, they are a social psychologist and far more interested in railing against systemic social issues which pads this book out to the modern expected length for non fiction self help books.
Most of his positions are plausible and passionately argued, and if you're looking for a neurodiversity acceptance manifesto you've found it, but at times it feels like this was written for the approval of an extremely online clique more than the wider neurodiverse …

Review of 'Unmasking Autism' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

Another unsatisfying book on autism. Slightly helpful, but unsatisfying. I liked the first chapter about what autism is, though I would have liked to know what kind of studies found out the information and a bit more elaboration on the technical stuff. I kind of wanted just that chapter, but it being the book.
Instead, the rest of the book was blog-style authors experiences, opinions and advice. Admittedly respectable all of it, but a bit informal for my liking. Besides maybe not jiving with the authors writing style, I think I also feel this way about the book because the science just isn't there yet. The author has to rely on "this educator is doing this thing" because there is no "this comprehensive study of what things were done and their impacts".
Another hardship I have with this book is that it describes autism from the social model of disability …

Review of 'Unmasking Autism' on 'Goodreads'

On Twitter @steve_asbell remarked "I just want to hand UNMASKING AUTISM to everyone in my life and say 'Read up. Your book report is due next Friday.'", and that's a pretty accurate take. A great book for undiagnosed or late diagnosed autistic people, or just people interested in learning more about autism and how to better support the autistic people in your life. Learning about masking was one of the key insights in figuring out I'm autistic, and is poorly understood by those still informed by a conventional wisdom on autism based on outdated stereotypes and hostile ableist assumptions. If you made it to adulthood without being identified as autistic (especially likely if you depart from the stereotypes based on observing white boys from middle-class backgrounds and/or have a marginalized identity likely to be failed by our medical and mental health establishments), you very likely learned to hide or compensate …

Good discussion of masking

I suspect this is another book that I need to re-read in the near future to really get the most out of. Lots of good stuff about masking and unmasking, the mental consequences therein, the implications for friendships and relationships, and a good nod in the direction of the social constructs that make masking necessary and may make unmasking really difficult.

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