| Autistic  individuals are often represented as “suprahumans” who, as angels, Christ  figures, martyrs, and Saints, possess special abilities that differentiate them  as “over,” “above,” or “higher than” other “normal” human beings.  Or, autistic individuals are identified as “inhumans”  who, as demons and sociopaths, do not  possess “the qualities proper or natural to a human being” and are especially  “destitute of natural kindness or pity” (Oxford English Dictionary).  This paper identifies depictions of autistics  as of, beyond, and without God to  argue:  first, symbolic representations  of autistics as “suprahuman” and “inhuman” demonstrate how little the general  public understands Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD); second, by identifying  autistics as “other,” audiences can disassociate themselves from the mentally  and developmentally challenged in order to reaffirm their own desires for  “normalcy”; and, third, such depictions allow audiences to ignore or neglect  their responsibilities to those with mental and developmental disabilities by  placing the “burden” of care in “God’s hands.”   Finally, I hope that by identifying and deconstructing representations  of autistics as “suprahumans” and “inhumans,” my research offers an expanded  definition of what it means to be “human” and will identify the need for new  representations that engender respect and dignity for autistic individuals. 
 AUTISTICS AS SUPRAHUMAN:  SAINTS, ANGELS, AND “CHILDREN OF GOD”
 
 In his 2006 book, Autism  and the God Connection, William  Stiller proposes that as “exquisitely sensitive” individuals, autistics possess  unique spiritual and “supernatural” qualities that enable them to “perceive  things that most others cannot” (145) because autistics possess the capacity  for “spiritual connectedness, heightened awareness, and exquisite sensitivity  beyond what is considered typical” (Stillman 18). On his website, Stillman specifically  describes those supranatural  qualities or abilities that an autistic individual possesses, including “a deep  appreciation for the beauty of nature, forests, lakes, streams and plant-life”;  an “innate spiritual or religious sense that compels others in positive ways”;  an “unspoken connection with dogs, cats, horses, butterflies and other  creatures”; an ability to hold “conversations that appear to be ‘two-way’ with  someone unseen, usually at the same place and time every day”; and, an ability  to “forecast what's going to happen next or know what someone is thinking  before it's said, especially with loved ones” (Stillman, “Demystifying Autism  from the Inside Out”).
 
 Autistic  individuals are also endowed with “Gifts of the Spirit” or the ability to know  “what someone is thinking before it is said; foretelling future events that  come to fruition; and enjoying special, unspoken bonds with animals” (Stillman, Autism and the God Connection 6).   Additionally, Stillman believes that autistic individuals often have  “spiritual protectors”—typically a deceased grandparent—who often use autistics  as conduits to make their spiritual presences known (Autism and the God  Connection 113).  Stillman notes that  “people with the greatest perceived differences (including our loved ones with  autism) are closely guarded through the divine grace of spiritual  protectors—those souls already in Spirit.   These protectors often appear to be readily accessible to many  individuals with autism” (104). Autistic individuals have “perceived visions of  grandparents and other loved ones in Spirit” and have even “communed with  angels” (7).  Stillman acknowledges the  challenges that autistic individuals face but argues that “those individuals  with the greatest life challenges are among the most advanced of souls” (8).  For instance, Stillman believes that non-verbal autistics “speak” in silence  with a “spirit” free from the “prison of the body” (64) because “Our Creator  makes no mistakes, and not speaking is simply and naturally the beauty of their  design” (63).
 
 Stillman notes  ways in which non-verbal autistics can communicate, such as facilitated  communication and telepathy, which he states are “a mode of expression bonded  in intimacy” (Autism and the God Connection 70), because “[w]hen we  think of persons with autism who live in silence, it certainly makes good sense  that telepathy is one such mode of communication” (71).  Stillman believes that non-verbal autistic  individuals use telepathy or “autistic hieroglyphics” and presents cases of  non-verbal autistic children who are obsessed with seemingly insignificant  objects that remind them of departed loved ones.  For instance, Stillman describes a young man  obsessed with smelling, touching, and tasting apples because they reminded him of  his mother and another boy obsessed with the trains that reminded him of his  grandfather (109).
 
 These “autistic  hieroglyphics” are also used by autistic individuals to convey messages to  their caregivers, as in the case of the non-verbal autistic boy who was  obsessed with Madonna’s 1984 song “Papa Don’t Preach.”  Stillman argues that it was no coincidence  that this child’s obsession with the song, in which Madonna sings “Daddy, I’m  keeping my baby,” coincided with his mother’s conflicts about institutionalizing  him (Autism and the God Connection 110).   Stilllman notes that “autistic hieroglyphics” challenge the assumption  that autistics can only communicate literally and concretely; instead, Stillman  argues that autistics are able to communicate symbolically—caregivers and  educators simply may not recognize it (111).   Specifically, Stillman states, “Disbelievers will categorically dismiss  such activity as senseless babble, the autistic equivalent of stereotypical  ‘baby talk.’ My belief is that most often during these times the individual  with autism is being privately counseled by a divine presence” (152).
 
 While he presents  his theory on the “God connection” from a position of compassion for autistic  individuals, Stillman identifies an autistic individual as a sort of suprahuman  child of God enables audiences to reaffirm their own desires for normalcy and,  in turn, stigmatizes autistic individuals as “other than human.”  Nick Pentzell sarcastically reiterates this  claim in his 2004 article “Fool of God” when he writes, “I am an emanation of  Christ, an angel, a miracle, a holy innocent, and a Fool of God” (36).  For centuries, the mentally and  developmentally challenged have been thought of as “God’s special children,  that whatsoever one did unto us, one did unto God, that we could embody or  reveal holy truths” (37).   In fact,  Pentzell believes that people’s reaction to his disability depends on “their  religious attitudes toward disability” (36).   As an autistic man, Penzell has been seen as a “punishment from God, a  conduit for something demonic or supernatural by people who haven’t understood  my method of communication, a burden to test the faith of my caregivers, and a  soul who incurred bad karma in past lives and now suffers autism.”  And, as a child, Pentzell was often mistaken  for a “simpleton,” and his misbehaviors were often dismissed or overlooked  because he could not possibly understand or “know the difference between good  and evil” (36).  Still, Pentzell argues  that positive misconceptions were not any more favorable:  well-meaning strangers often [spoke] to him  as if he were “a feeble-minded child forever in a natural or Edenic state of  innocence” (36).
 
 Such  representations of autistics as suprahumans reinforce the public’s fears of  those with ASD and justify prejudicial practices and policies that perpetuate  inadequate treatment and care.  Pentzell,  likewise, argues that the mentally and developmentally challenged need “a more  meaningful, realistic, and constructive faith perspective” that does not  mythologize the experiences or lives of the mentally and developmentally  challenged:  “We are no more or less  metaphysically connected than the rest of humanity.  The presence of disability is no more  spiritually revelatory or meaningful than countless other basic human  experiences and struggles” (37).    Pentzell argues that by perceiving the mentally and developmentally  challenged as “God’s special children” society is able to repudiate its ethical  responsibilities to those most in need of support and care since those with  disabilities will never be equals if they are viewed as “God’s charges, and not  society’s.”  Pentzell explains this point  further when he notes:
 
 Romanticized  faith places the active role on God:  A  religious person gets to feel good because she or he is thinking nice things  about us.  If there is a “miracle” to be  had, it will occur when people are able to see what was there all along, that  which had been hidden:  our able selves.  We do not need miraculous healing—we need  basic human and societal help. (38)
 
 Additionally, by identifying  autistic individuals as suprahumans, we may be more inclined to read something  “deeper” into them to fulfill our own curiosities about God, spirituality, and  the afterlife.  Identifying autistic  individuals as suprahumans confirms audiences’ desires to believe that these  “superior beings” prove, for instance, as one parent notes, the existence of a  higher power and that autistics’ experiences with their spiritual guardians are  “manifestations of God’s work” (qtd in Stillman, Autism and the God  Connection 145).  By identifying  autistics as possessing special “connections” with God, Stillman’s readers are  able to confirm their faith and relieve their fears about death and mortality. The  autistic parents and caretakers that Stillman discusses, perhaps, want to  believe that moments of extra sensory perception occurred because such  instances of suprahuman abilities reaffirm parents’ and caretakers’ own desires  and need for purpose and meaning.  This  point is supported in Stillman’s book when one parent states, “I have witnessed  on several occasions his conversations with someone that I could not see, and  on occasion I could sense a presence during these conversations.  I have also gotten comments from my son that  are very profound and have strengthened  my faith in God” (emphasis mine, qtd in Stillman 152).  Readers “see” particular behaviors or  statements as meaningful because these behaviors and statements may tell  Stillman’s readers what they want to believe:   God exists, life exists after death, and God has a purpose or for each  of us, autistic or not.  As Stillman  notes, autistic individuals reflect the “purposeful plan to refocus us on the  importance of reverence for all of humanity” (18).  Stillman even challenges skeptics, like  myself, who do not believe that autistics possess the ability to communicate  with the dead, communicate with family members via extra sensory perception, or  communicate with animals: “Skeptics may need unequivocally direct and blatant  proof.  But that would detract and  undermine the communication’s purpose, allaying the true focus:  loving affirmation that life (and  consciousness) continues beyond our physical selves” (107).
 
 AUTISTICS AS INHUMAN:  THOSE BEYOND AND WITHOUT GOD
 
 When Virginia Tech  student Cho Seung-hui opened fire on his classmates and professors on April 16,  2006, many wondered what could have enabled anyone to kill thirty-two people in  cold blood.  Especially gruesome was that  Cho seemed to lack any sort of empathy or compassion for the students he killed  and the others he terrorized.   In a rush  to explain Cho’s inhumane behavior, The Associated Press reported on April 20,  2006 that Cho was diagnosed as autistic after emigrating to the United States from South Korea as a child; the AP  quoted Cho’s great aunt as the source of this revelation:
 
 “From the  beginning, he wouldn't answer me,” Kim Yang-soon, Cho's great aunt, said in an  interview with Associated Press Television News.  He “didn’t talk. Normally sons and mothers  talk. There was none of that for them. He was very cold.” “When they went to  the United States,  they told them it was autism,” said Kim, 85, adding that the family had  constant worries about Cho. (qtd in “Virginia Tech Shooter ‘Was Autistic'”)
 
 However, in the days that followed  The Associated Press’s statements regarding Cho’s supposed autism diagnosis,  parents, educational specialists, and autism activists rallied against the  connections between autism and Cho’s behavior, and CNN was one of the first  news organizations to stop reporting on the autism diagnosis, even if they  never rescinded their original reports.   Because of the lack of awareness or  understanding of autism by audiences, it seemed possible, if not plausible,  that Cho’s behavior was caused by his supposed autism diagnosis.  The description of Cho as quiet, withdrawn,  and socially awkward matched with descriptions often associated with autistic  individuals; psychosis, homicide, and autism were closely linked by the media  and their audiences.
 Such  portrayals of autistic individuals, as unemotional inhuman murderers, are based  on misconceptions regarding autism which, in turn, reinforce those same  misconceptions.   Since television and  movie industries have perpetuated or initiated stereotypes “so durable and  pervasive that they have become mainstream society’s perception of disabled  people (Longmore 3), it is no surprise then that forensic psychiatrist Dr.  Arturo Silva and criminal profiler and psychologist Johanna Gallers would  propose that many of the world’s most famous serial killers—who were capable of  unspeakable cruelties—were, in fact, autistic (Kilzer).  Silva argues that the common thread among  such sociopathic murders as Henry Lee Lucas, Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, and  Dennis Rader was their inability to empathize, their obsession with  deconstructing women, and their lack of remorse for their crimes (Kilzer).  Kilzer’s article suggests, then, that men  like Lucas, Bundy, Gacy, and Rader killed because they, like other autistic  individuals, supposedly lack compassion and empathy, ultimately suggesting that  autism precedes homicide.  The argument  stands then that only a person with a biological inability to empathize with  other human beings could be capable of committing crimes as heinous as those  committed by these men, and autistic individuals are perceived as having this  type of biological difference.  However,  as Nance Cason and Sandy Shaw note in their response to Kilzer’s article, Silva  makes “a sweeping generalization taking advantage of the fact that autism has  been in the news a lot lately.  While the  doctor credited with making the comparison seems to know what makes mass  murderers tick, his knowledge of autism appears to be cursory, at best.”  Cason and Shaw also argue that Silva’s claims  make incredible leaps in logic by connecting autism, a developmental disorder,  to the types of personality disorders that lead some to kill:  “In fact, most individuals with autism lack  the highly developed executive function abilities necessary to plan and execute  a single ‘pre-meditated’ murder without being caught, let alone a series of  such crimes.”  Again, media reports on  Cho’s supposed autism diagnosis and representations of autistic individuals as  serial killers presents autistics as inhumans void of remorse or empathy,  individuals beyond redemption or  forgiveness.
 
 Not quite as  malicious as identification of autistics as beyond God, but just as demeaning,  are identifications of autistics as without grace, mercy, or redemption.  In such  representations, through prayer and God’s intervention a “cure” for autism will  be found.  Similar to autism activist  groups Defeat Autism Now (DAN) and Cure Autism Now (CAN), Gary J.  Heffner’s “Pray for Autism Now” (PAN) web page is “founded on the belief that  God, through His Son, Jesus Christ, intervenes in the lives of those affected  by autism,” and encourages readers to “Pray for Autism Now” in order to  “redeem” oneself or one’s child from autism. Heffner encourages readers to  bring their “fear of autism to God.”   Heffner writes that “[t]he thought of a normal child suddenly slipping  away […] into a world of aloneness and unimaginable fears scared me.”  In fact, Heffner created the PAN web page to  share his granddaughter’s story of “healing” through divine intervention:
 
 My wife and I  prayed daily for our granddaughter and our Sunday School class prayed as well.  […] Slowly, we began to see results. Our granddaughter began to develop  language, respond to our voice, imitate things we did and said, and (most  importantly) hug us back when we hugged her. Our granddaughter is now five  years old. […] Praise the Lord!
 
 Heffner attributes his  granddaughter’s success to the power of prayer, as when he states, “I am not  sure what happened but I believe God gave us wisdom and had mercy on our  granddaughter by healing her. I continue to pray for her every day. We praise  God for His healing!”  As Heffner states,  “God has been merciful and loving, as He always is.”
 
 While not  mentioned specifically in The Bible, Heffner states on another web page,  “Autism and The Bible,” that Autism Spectrum Disorders serve as a metaphor of  the relationship many parents and caretakers have with God, as when Heffner  notes that “the most tragic part of autism is that I would love to comfort a  child with autism, but he won't let me. The more I pull the child close to me,  the more he pushes away. […] Isn't this like our relationship to God?”  Heffner elaborates on this statement with a  passage from Isaiah 6:9: “Go and tell this people, Hear, but understand not; and  see, but do not apprehend with your mind.”   In Heffner’s scenario, then, autistic individuals represent those who do  not follow or believe in Christian doctrine, and autistic individuals, in this  case, symbolically represent those who reject Biblical teachings.  Heffner further explains how autism reflects  this relationship when he states,
 
 During this time  the people of Israel  would not listen to God or His prophets. He continually spoke to them but they  would not hear. God sent many prophets who used many different methods to speak  to them but try as they might, Israel  would not listen. They had working ears but would not or could not hear. How  like autism! Is this a taste of how God feels when dealing with us? Wouldn't  you do anything to just get through to a person with autism? God will do anything to get you to listen to Him! (Italics  in original)
 
 These passages  from Heffner’s web site are troublesome for several reasons:  Heffner’s final statement that “God will do anything to get you to listen to Him”  seems to imply that God will do anything to those without God—including “cursing” them with a plague of autism cases.   More troublesome though are the parallels made  between autistics’ disabilities with those who do not believe or follow  Christian teachings.  These sorts of  rhetorical identifications show how, as Kenneth Burke argues in A Rhetoric  of Motives, “ the ways in which individuals are at odds with one another,  or become identified with groups more or less at odds with one another” (Burke  22).  Specifically, Burke writes, “A is  not identical with his colleague, B. But insofar as their interests are joined,  A is identified with B. Or he may identify himself with B even when their  interests are not joined, if he assumes that they are, or is persuaded to  believe so” (20).  As it relates to these  passages from Heffner’s PAN web page, Heffner attempts to persuade readers to  follow biblical teachings by identifying autistic individuals similarly to  those who reject Christian doctrine:  “A”  in this case, autistic individuals, relates to “B,” nonbelievers who reject  God’s teachings, and both of whom are unlike “C” in that they are not like the  Christian followers who “hear” and “understand” God.   Like  those without God who have “working ears but would not or could not hear,”  autistic individuals have working brains but would not or could not understand.  As Heffner notes on his web site, “This  example is not meant to equate autism with our spiritual condition but to help  us all relate to the plight of autism and to lead those who desire to a saving  knowledge of Jesus Christ.”
 A final conclusion  readers can draw from Heffner’s plea is that the “cure” for autism can only  come through prayer.  Heffner writes, “This  journey in the world of autism has led me to believe that the cure for autism  lies in the hands of our Almighty God! He has helped me to see that the  increase in autism in these latter days may well lead to a cure. What I ask of  each of you who love the Lord is to pray each day for a cure for autism.”  Heffner encourages parents and caretakers to  repeat this prayer daily:
 
 Dear Father,  forgive me and my nation for our sins. We have failed to look to You for help  with this disorder called autism. Forgive us. I pray that You will lead us to  find a cure for autism. […] Lord I pray for a miraculous cure for all children  with autism. […] I pray also that You would lead researchers to find a cure for  autism. Help the researchers to be humble, to seek You, to understand the  connections between the physical, biological, chemical, and immunological  findings in autism research.
 
 Again, the purpose of Heffner’s  prayers reveal a self-serving intention of ministering to readers the tenets of  Christian faith; in this case, autism serves as a vehicle for teaching other’s  about Christianity.  This prayer seems to  imply that the recent increase in autism diagnoses is a punishment from God and  an autism diagnosis is a means of bringing parents and nonbelievers to  God.  All of this begs the question  then—is the purpose of identifying autistic individuals and, in this case,  parents and caregivers, as without God serve the best interests of autistic individuals  or is it really to justify and reaffirm others’ own faith?
 
 CONCLUSION
 
 While  this study focuses on several specific representations of autistics as  suprahumans and inhumans, this research illustrates how autistic individuals  are unfortunately identified as objects of wonder and awe or viewed with scorn  and fear.  However, neither  representations are appropriate for dealing with the particular needs and  challenges that face autistic individuals, nor do they engender the respect and  dignity that all human beings are entitled to and deserve.  While identifying autistic individuals as  suprahuman might be a more positive representation than those that identify  autistic individuals as inhuman soulless beings without morality and beyond  mercy, such identifications still stigmatize and are inaccurate.
 
 Works  CitedBurke, Kenneth.  A  Rhetoric of Motives.  Berkeley:  University of California  Press, 1969.
 
 Heffner,  Gary J.  “Autism and The Bible.” The  Autism Home Page. 21 Oct 2007.  <http://groups.msn.com/TheAutismHomePage/autismandthebible.msnw>.
 
 ----.  “Pray for Autism Now.” The Autism Home  Page. 21 Oct 2007.  <http://groups.msn.com/TheAutismHomePage/prayforautism.msnw>.
 
 Longmore,  Paul K.  “Screening Stereotypes:  Images of Disabled People.”  Screening  Disability:  Essays on Cinema and  Disability.  Eds. Anthony Enns  and Christopher R. Smit.  Lanham, MD,  2001.
 
 Oxford English Dictionary.  2nd ed.  1989.   21 Oct 2007. <http://ezproxy.twu.edu:2148/>.
 
 Kilzer,  Lou.  “Piecing Together Serial Killer  Puzzle.”  Rocky Mountain News.   28 Jul 2006.  28 Nov 2006.  <www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/local/article/0,1299,DRMN_15_  4876226,00.html>.
 
 Pentzell,  Nick.  “Fools for God.”  The Other Side:  Strength for the Journey.  Mar/Apr 2004.   36-8.
 
 Stillman, William.  Autism and the God Connection:   Redefining the Autistic Experience through Extraordinary Accounts of  Spiritual Giftedness. Sourcebooks, Inc:  Naperville,   IL, 2006.
 
 ----.  “Demystifying Autism from the Inside Out.” Autism  and the God Connection. 21 Oct 2007. <http://www.williamstillman.com/connection.html>.
 
 “Virginia  Tech Shooter 'Was Autistic.’” The Sydney Morning Herald. 20 Apr 2006.  21 Oct 2007.  <http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2007/04/20/1176697070692.html>.
 
              
                  I would like to thank Brandon Barnes and Donna Souder for their thoughtful  suggestions and observations.    |