tern wrote:
How would I document it in a standalone blog, then?
The case only takes a couple of lines to make, as I have done there and in the Bittersweet book.
No, it would take a LOT more than a couple of lines.
tern wrote:
That the seeming gap in any non-famous kids emerging as authors between 1978 and 2001
You should not assume that most people are fully aware that there was such a gap, in the first place. Can you point to any statistics, from any reputable scholarly source, on the number of non-famous kids emerging as authors between 1978 and 2001 vs. the number of non-famous kids emerging as authors in decades prior to 1978 or after 2001?
Among those people who are already aware that there was such a gap, you should not assume that they would agree with you as to the main reason for it. Correlation does not equal causation.
I vaguely recall hearing, from various sources back in the period from 1978 to 2001, that the field of publishing had gotten more and more competitive, and that it had gotten harder and harder for new writers (of any age) to launch a career. This was generally attributed to greater and greater consolidation of the publishing industry itself, plus more and more people wanting to be writers. I also recall reading that many publishing companies were becoming more and more risk-averse, hence less willing to take a chance on publishing anyone who was not already famous.
tern wrote:
correlates with the generation when conservative backlash hardline attitudes to school authority and homework pressure were in favour, before autism awareness started to break some holes in that.
Hmm. I was never under the impression that there was ever a shortage of good writers, whether due to educational practices or anything else. I do remember hearing about a shortage of publishing opportunities, even for excellent but not-already-famous authors.
The most relevant thing that changed around 2001 was the rapidly-growing popularity of the Internet, which enabled many new writers to become famous without going through already-established channels.
tern wrote:
The personal case is findable in a collection of anti-psychiatry stories, under "eighties teenage psychiatry for school pressure: one writer squashed another."
I would suggest that you create a blog describing your own personal case, plus other posts linking to and commenting on as many other personal stories as you can find, of other people who were children back then, along with other kinds of evidence, e.g. links to relevant news stories and academic journal articles, with your comments on these. If you want people to take your cause seriously, you need to make the evidence readily available, not just tell us where it is "findable."
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