Cookies on this website

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you click 'Continue' we'll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies and you won't see this message again. Click 'Find out more' for information on how to change your cookie settings.

A short talk by Professor Joseph N. Straus followed by discussion

Thursday, 28 May 2026, 4.30pm to 5.30pm

The Stereotype of "The Autistic Savant"
A short talk by Professor Joseph N. Straus followed by discussion

Thursday 28 May 2026
4.30pm – 5.30pm
Online (Teams) and In Person (Learning Centre, Schwarzman Centre for the Humanities, Oxford, OX2 6GG)
Registration is required for online participation:
https://events.teams.micros[…]97f5-4f93-b4ba-fe68b852cf91

Abstract:
“Autistic savants” are understood as people whose high level of skill in one area stands in contrast to their perceived deficiencies in other areas. Their stories have mostly been told either by psychiatrists and psychologists within a pathologizing medicalized model of disability or as inspirational tales of overcoming in popular and social media. Both of these narrative frames have enfreaked them as alien Others, whose gifts and disabilities place them outside the normal run of human intelligence and creativity. With a focus mostly on music, I will give a more realistic account of their intellectual, musical, and creative lives. They are not freaks, or aliens, or miracles—they are autistic people who are good at things.

Biography:
Joseph Straus is Distinguished Professor of Music Theory at the CUNY Graduate Center. With a specialization in music since 1900, he has written numerous technical music-theoretical articles and scholarly monographs on a variety of topics in modernist music. He has also written a series of articles and books that engage disability as a cultural practice, including Extraordinary Measures: Music and Disability (Oxford University Press, 2011) and Broken Beauty: Musical Modernism and the Representation of Disability (Oxford University Press, 2018).

This event is co-organised by the TORCH Neurodiversity Network and the Humans in Humanities Network. It features a short talk by Professor Joseph N. Straus, followed by discussion. Participants are welcome to join either in person or online. Registration is required for online participation.

Please note that recording of any kind is not permitted at this event.

To join the events mailing list, contact:
neurodiversity@torch.ox.ac.uk or
human-ities@torch.ox.ac.uk

Speaker(s): Professor Joseph N. Straus

Department: Humanities (Division)

Organiser: TORCH Neurodiversity Network; TORCH Humans in Humanities NetworkORCH

Host: TORCH Neurodiversity Network; TORCH Humans in Humanities Network

Register here: