Neuroqueer theory


Neuroqueer theory is a framework that intersects the fields of neurodiversity and queer theory. It examines the ways society constructs and defines normalcy, particularly concerning gender, sexual orientation, and dis/ability, and challenges those constructions. It critiques the pathologization of neurodivergent individuals and the ways in which it intersects with the marginalization of queer individuals. Neuroqueer theory is reliant on a deep understanding of intersectionality, the way in which people's social, cultural, and political identities combine and result in unique combinations of privilege and discrimination.
The term neuroqueer can be used as a verb, adjective, or identity label. As a verb, it refers to the act of challenging neuronormativity and heteronormativity, as well as advocating for recognition and celebration diverse experiences and identities. As an adjective, neuroqueer describes phenomena, theories, or identities that challenge neuronormativity and heteronormativity, emphasizing the intersections and diversity of queer and neurodivergent identities and experiences. Individuals who identify as neuroqueer are often neurodivergent and queer, though this is not a necessity. Nick Walker, who initially coined the term, has indicated that neurotypical, cisgender, heterosexual individuals may also identify as neuroqueer if they are actively challenging neuronormativity and heteronormativity, especially if they are challenging the existing categorizations of gender, dis/ability label, or sexual orientation. Recent studies have suggested the existence of a relationship between queerness and neurodivergence: where neurodivergent people are more likely than their neurotypical peers to identify as LGBTQIA+, and gender diverse people are more likely to be neurodivergent than their cisgender peers. At the present time, the reason for the connection between queerness and neurodivergence is not known, though several hypotheses exist, they each require further investigation.

Definition

Neuroqueer was initially conceptualized as a verb—neuroqueering—as a way of "queering neurocognitive norms as well as gender norms". Walker has indicated that, as a verb, neuroqueer "refers to a broad range of interrelated practices", and "as an adjective, it describes things that are associated with those practices or that result from those practices".
Nick Walker, Athena Lynn Michaels-Dillon, and Remi Yergeau established the following eight integral components:
  1. As an adjective, neuroqueer can refer to people who are "both neurodivergent and queer, with some degree of conscious awareness and/or active exploration around how these two aspects of one's being entwine and interact".
  2. As an adjective, neuroqueer means "embodying and expressing one's neurodivergence in ways that also queer one's performance of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and/or other aspects of one's identity".
  3. As a verb, neuroqueer means "engaging in practices intended to undo and subvert one's own cultural conditioning and one's ingrained habits of neuronormative and heteronormative performance, with the aim of reclaiming one's capacity to give more full expression to one's uniquely weird potentials and inclinations".
  4. As a verb, neuroqueer means "engaging in the queering of one's own neurocognitive processes by intentionally altering them in ways that create significant and lasting increase in one's divergence from prevailing cultural standards of neuronormativity and heteronormativity".
  5. As a verb, neuroqueer means "approaching, embodying, and/or experiencing one's neurodivergence as a form of queerness".
  6. As a verb, neuroqueer means "producing literature, art, scholarship, and/or other cultural artifacts that foreground neuroqueer experiences, perspectives, and voices".
  7. As a verb, neuroqueer means "producing critical responses to literature and/or other cultural artifacts, focusing on intentional or unintentional characterizations of neuroqueerness and how those characterizations illuminate and/or are illuminated by actual neuroqueer lives and experiences".
  8. As a verb, neuroqueer means "working to transform social and cultural environments in order to create spaces and communities— and ultimately a society— in which engagement in any or all of the above practices is permitted, accepted, supported, and encouraged".
Although these core concepts have been described, Walker and others argue that the neuroqueer community often "actively resist any authoritative definition". As such, any "conceptualization should not be viewed as comprehensive or definitive. Never static, the term neuroqueer is fluid, shifting, and always adapting".

History

Neuroqueer theory grew from the existing fields of disability studies and queer theory. The former arose as a field of scholarship in the 1970s following the disability rights movement and sought to center the perspectives of disabled people, as well as challenge existing understandings of disability. This resulted in the social model of disability, which views disability as a societal failure rather than an individual deficit. For example, the social model of disability argues that a deaf person is disabled not by their inability to hear but rather by societal structures that privilege hearing; as such, to reduce barriers, society should provide greater access for deaf people, such as access to sign language interpreters and audio captioning, rather than asking the deaf person to use hearing aids and cochlear implants.
Since the rise of disability studies and the disability rights movement, both scholars and disabled people have critiqued the lack of focus on mental disability and chronic illness. This resulted in the development of mad studies and other disciplines. The term neurodivergence arose in the 1990s to challenge narratives that described mental disabilities as deficits, especially relating to autism. The term has also been used to facilitate discussions on the diversity of neurological function and performance. Further, many advocates and scholars have argued against using person-first language when referring to neurodivergent people, as they view neurodivergence in the context of identity and not pathology and believe it should not be separated from one's personhood.
Queer theory emerged in the 1990s to analyze and challenge heteronormativity. Queer theorists have often used the verb to queer to refer to the act of idealizing and inventing an ever-evolving future through new methods of examining the world and how we live in it.
Nick Walker coined the term neuroqueer in 2008, though Athena Lynn Michaels-Dillon had also independently coined the phrase, and Remi Yergeau had been considering the concept, as well, referring to it as neurological queerness. Walker used the term in relation to queer theory to "examin how socially-imposed neuronormativity and socially-imposed heteronormativity were entwined with one another, and how the queering of either of those two forms of normativity entwined with and blended into the queering of the other one." The word neuroqueer first appeared in print on the back cover of Michaels-Dillon's novel Defiant and in Yergeau's Authoring Autism.
The use of neuroqueer has since grown to refer to a field of academic study, as well as an identity label. Some people argue that because ableism has defined what is considered "normal", where neurodivergent and queer people are deemed "atypical", recognition of person-first language and "celebrated differences" do not shift ableist constructions of neurological functioning. These same scholars and activist say that people who identify as neuroqueer actively reject ableist assimilation practices; by embracing their selfhood and refusing to conform, they are queering their existence, actions, and behaviors in social spaces.

Prevalence of neuroqueer identities

Statistical data on both queer and neurodivergent people is limited by differing social and cultural definitions of identity, safety concerns of coming out, the ability to receive a diagnosis, and other factors.

Baseline statistics

The latest data compiled from around the world estimates about 10-20% of the general population are neurodivergent in some way. Among the general global population, about 1-2% have been diagnosed with autism, 1.13% have been diagnosed with ADHD, and 5-17% have been diagnosed with dyslexia, though global data lacks the nuance of individual countries, the criteria, and timing of assessments. A 2023 survey of adults in 30 countries suggests about 9% of the general population identifies as LGBTQ; however, this data leaves out many other countries and is limited by who participated and how comfortable they felt answering the survey freely. Similar studies compiling worldwide data have estimated about 0.4-1.3% of the general population identifies as gender diverse. There is variation in population statistics between countries. For example, 2021 census data from the United Kingdom reports that only 3% of the general population identify as gay, lesbian, or bisexual, where the global estimate is about 9% of the general population.

Statistical relationship between neurodivergence and queerness

Recent research suggests neurodivergent people, especially autistic individuals, are more likely than their neurotypical peers to identify as LGBTQIA+. More specifically, autistic individuals are 3 times as likely to identify as transgender compared to their neurotypical peers; a higher incidence of autistic traits has been associated with a higher rate of identifying as gender diverse. Further research expands on this, finding that of their participants, 0.7% of non-autistic children identify as gender diverse, while 4-5.4% of autistic children do identify as gender diverse. Additionally, a study on sexuality and neurodivergence found that while 70% of neurotypical participants identified as heterosexual, only 30% of autistic people identified as heterosexual. Other research on neurodivergence and sexuality has suggested neurodivergent people 8 times as likely to identify as asexual than their neurotypical peers.
The relationship between neurodivergence and queerness appears to go both ways, with neurodivergent people more likely to identify as LGBTQIA+, and gender diverse people more likely to be neurodivergent compared to their cisgender peers. Individuals who do not identify with their sex assigned at birth are between 3 and 6 times more likely to be autistic compared to their cisgender peers. Compared to their cisgender peers, gender-diverse individuals are more likely to report traits of autism—enhanced pattern recognition, sensory issues and difficulty understanding other emotions—and 5 times more likely to suspect they are undiagnosed autistics. Research on transgender adolescents suggests about 6-25.5% of people who identify as gender diverse are also autistic. One study in the Netherlands suggested 5% of the general population identified as gender diverse, compared to 15% percent of autistic adults, highlighting the relationship between gender diversity and autism. A study in the U.S. showed a similar result, where 3-5% of the general population wanted to be the opposite gender compared to 11.4% of autistic adults.