54 pages • 1 hour read
Holly SmaleA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Smale emphasizes the differences of neurodiversity as perceived by oneself versus others throughout Cassandra in Reverse to provide a nuanced representation of the experience of neurodiversity. Through first-person detail, parenthetical insertions, and pairing others’ observations about Cassie with her reactions to them, Smale provides an experiential representation of neurodiversity and illustrates the negative effects of a lack of understanding about neurodiversity.
By using specific narrative voice, first-person perspective, and sensory detail, Cassie’s descriptions of her way of being in the world create an experiential representation of neurodiversity. For example, she describes being overstimulated as follows: “The noise, the crowds, the flares, the colors, the alarms, the whistles, all at once it feels like I’m a million mouths and none of them can speak but all of them are screaming and I’m being swept away […] in a flooding human river” (63). Smale includes tactile, auditory, and visual details in this passage, as well as the visceral, bodily simile of being a million mouths that can’t speak but are screaming. Throughout the text, Cassie’s vivid, first-person accounts of her experience provide a detailed representation of the experience of neurodiversity.
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