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Do you enjoy fiction or non fiction?
Fiction 8%  8%  [ 1 ]
Non fiction 25%  25%  [ 3 ]
Both 67%  67%  [ 8 ]
Neither 0%  0%  [ 0 ]
Total votes : 12

jamie0.0
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23 Oct 2024, 11:47 pm

I recently took an online autism test on a friend's recommendation.
One of the questions was simply, do you enjoy fiction?
I struggle to understand any correlation between media preferences and autsim and how it could be a determining factor in a diagnosis.
What's your take on the matter?

I also included a poll because I'm curious.



traven
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24 Oct 2024, 2:29 am

yeah, that's the more classic autism (hfa), but not always for aspergers



i can't be depressed because i sleep at night,
soooo from that i probably also can't have autism/aspergers



Carbonhalo
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24 Oct 2024, 3:26 am

My mother was a public librarian.
I had unlimited access to the library including restricted and the stacks.
Until she left, I read every sci-fi they had and the entire 621 section.
(Plus I had first pick of the "withdrawn")
Thanks mum :D



DuckHairback
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24 Oct 2024, 4:28 am

I like both. I've always read a lot of fiction, so does my autistic daughter. We write it too.

For me, fiction is valuable because its only good when the characters are recognisable as real people. I mean they behave in ways that real people behave, they have motivations that real people have and react to things in a way that rings true.

So you can have a story set in a totally unrealistic place - e.g. a space station in another galaxy - but you can still apply what you learn from it to real life because its always just people, being people. Unless it's aliens. Even then, in fiction, they're usually just analogues for people.

Authors are usually students of human behaviour. Most of what I've learned about people has come from fiction and it's served me well in real life.


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pcgoblin
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09 Nov 2024, 7:46 pm

When I started to read, I initially non-fiction. Specifically books on films and horror/monster/fantasy films. Before that, I looked at the pictures. Dinosaurs, race cars. Before 1970, I did not know books on monster movies even existed. I started reading fiction in high school, but voluntarily reading fiction when I was around 17. I recall voluntarily reading The Hunchback of Notre Dame when I was about 15. It took me a long time, many months, to read it. I bought several monster books around then from the second hand store. Frankenstein, Dracula, The Invisible Man, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. They are still sitting on my bookshelf, unread. I found it very difficult to get interested in the story. I literally just told someone (through a text) that I should read those while I still can.
Why is autism associated with fiction? Maybe because it is more of an internal creation, the world is more internally created. I don't know. ???? That is pure speculation. Horror movies existed in my head, and on film, but most films existed in my head when I was a teen because I mostly knew the pictures from books, Illustrated this, Pictorial history of that, etc.
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