DOI: 10.4103/tjp.tjp_25_25 ISSN: 2772-8706

Leo Kanner: The man who redefined autism – and the shadows cast by his legacy: How a clinician’s obsession with observation shaped psychiatry’s best and worst instincts

Vinil Marwel Gundu

Leo Kanner’s 1943 publication on “Autistic Disturbances of Affective Contact” was a landmark in the conceptualization of autism. While pioneering in its clinical precision and advocacy for innate etiology, Kanner’s framework also introduced biases that linger today. This historical commentary revisits Kanner’s formative years, diagnostic paradigms, and cultural oversights. It critiques the narrow demographic representation in his studies, his inadvertent role in the “refrigerator mother” myth, and the gender and racial disparities that ensued. Through modern lenses of neurodiversity and advocacy, the article underscores the enduring influence—and limitations—of Kanner’s legacy in autism research and diagnosis.

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