Abstract
Most accounts of the history of autism begin with the Johns Hopkins psychiatrist Leo Kanner's classic 1943 paper, "Autistic Disturbances of Affective Contact," an article with unforgettable case descriptions of 11 children whose features differed "so markedly and uniquely from anything reported so far" as to merit a new syndrome. It is less often noted that in the same paper, Kanner described an image of the stereotypical parent of the autistic child that was every bit as striking. "They all," he noted in a boldly italicized sentence, "come of highly intelligent families". Most fathers had doctoral degrees, nine of the 11 mothers were college graduates, and the extended families included an...