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Max Green
Lynne Streeter
ENG 112 NJ
03/14/12
Asperger Syndrome: Obstacles that Lead to Maturity
Being mentally “challenged” is not as challenging as what most would believe;
being “abnormal” does not mean one is that different; being “handicapped” is not
necessarily such a disability. Mental disorders, syndromes, and disabilities are a
significant part of our medical community today. For thousands of years, biological
diseases have been the epicenter of human problems, but now that vaccines and
antibiotics have been discovered, more focus is being turned towards the diseases of the
mind; however, these “diseases” are not contagious and do not always cause sickness and
death. A psychological problem is simply a mental function that is considered to be
abnormal, or what the majority of humans do not have. One emerging mental syndrome
in particular has been the subject of controversy in the medical community. This
syndrome, known as Asperger Syndrome (AS), was first recognized and given a name to
by Dr. Hans Asperger in the 1940’s (DuCharme and McGrady 1). Most of the debate
around Asperger Syndrome lies in its broad criteria and its similarity to the more famous
Autistic Disorder (DuCharme and McGrady 1). The way Autism differs from Asperger
Syndrome is that AS has the following differential criteria: no significant verbal
communication impairment, no delay in language use during childhood, and no delays in
cognitive development and an overall curiosity for surroundings (DuCharme and
McGrady 2). Moreover, many criteria for AS cannot always be studied with laboratory
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observations, and so there is still a large amount of broad, self-interpreted traits and
characteristics of AS that have yet to be fully agreed upon by the medical community.
Thus, some of the broader and more easily-recognized criteria that will be discussed are
as follows: significant social impairments in building and maintaining relationships with
peers (Shaked and Yirmiya 109), a misunderstanding of social gestures (Shaked and
Yirmiya 106), an above-average intelligence quotient (DuCharme and McGrady 8),
narrow areas of interest (Gerhardt 162), misinterpretation of metaphorical words and
phrases (Shaked and Yirmiya 107), and a repetition of certain actions or words (APA
389). People with AS struggle in some aspects of their daily life, but most significantly
in their social interactions with others and the relationships they have with friends and
family (Shaked and Yirmiya 104). Nonetheless, many AS people do not consider
themselves to have any severe disorder when compared to the “NT” (“Neurotypical,” or
people outside of the Autism Spectrum) people (Schneider 12). Oskar Schell, a fictional
character who displays many noticeable and odd characteristics in his personality, will
have his daily life and interactions with people put under a microscope in this essay, in
the hopes of gaining further insight into his mind. Oskar is the main character of
Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, and is a very unique
child who has undergone many trials and tribulations in the past few years of his
life. With the death of his father in the September 11th, 2001 attacks on the World Trade
Center Towers, Oskar has become more distant from his mother and has suffered
emotionally in many aspects of his day-to-day life. Due to the fact that Oskar acts very
differently from his peers, one can possibly infer that he may have some kind of slight
mental or development difference. After observing Oskar’s actions and doing more in-
Green 3
depth research regarding mental disorders, I have theorized that he displays many
symptoms of Asperger Syndrome, and may in fact fit the diagnosis. Additionally, does
having the label “disorder” truly mean that one is less well-off than any other person? If
Oskar truly does have AS, I believe that it may have actually helped him in his journey
throughout the novel, allowing him to grow and mature into an adult.
Asperger Syndrome has many characteristics, but the most notable to observe is
the difficulty a patient have in their approach to interacting socially with others his or her
own age (Shaked and Yirmiya 105). While the medical diagnosis of social functioning in
AS is quite broad, patients with either AS or Autism are described as having a “lack of
social or emotionally reciprocity” (APA 387). Many consider that AS patients, while
having a an impairment in communication, can still converse, use language efficiently,
and carry on conversations with people (Tager-Flusberg 92). The coup de grâce is that
while AS patients make strong efforts and have a “willingness to engage in social
contact” (Schneider 17) and interact with peers, their actions are often “clumsy and not
successful” (Shaked and Yirmiya 109). Their words and sentence structure are
occasionally “poorly organized” (106), with social skills that are “immature and rigid”
(109), all while having difficulty understanding why others do not enjoy interacting with
them (109). Also, patients seem “socially intrusive” (Little 139) by peers who do not
understand their way of thought. Due to these issues an AS patient encounters, they
sometimes become socially avoidant because of their awkward interactions and
misunderstanding of peers (Shaked and Yirmiya 105). They begin to associate with
others outside of their age group, both much younger or older, often having “preference
to adult interaction” (DuCharme and McGrady 10), most likely because peers their own
Green 4
age do not understand them. Humor and comedy does also not come easily for them to
understand, having very different ideas of what is appropriate and considered the social
norm (Shaked and Yirmiya 109). In addition to the above, bullying and teasing is a
common action that occurs because of AS children’s “unusual interests and normal
sociability” (Lyons and Fitzgerald 50).
As mentioned before, Oskar Schell has many odd characteristics about himself
that led me to observing him in greater detail in regards to a diagnosis of Asperger
Syndrome. At first glance, one will notice that he has no friends his own age, other than
“The Minch” (Foer 73) and “Toothpaste” (73), both actually tied as being below his
doorman on a list of people most important to him. Oskar has no trouble whatsoever
approaching, speaking fluently, and conversing with the people around him. In fact,
Oskar is usually the instigator of his conversations and interactions: as seen in his
discussion with the limousine driver, Oskar went out of his way to talk with him and tell
him jokes and stories, trying to win over the limo driver’s friendship (5). However,
Oskar had trouble in his speech organization, jumping around from topic to topic: “your
sunglasses are one hundred dollars… do you know a lot of curse words?... succotash my
Balzac, dipshiitake… cool driving gloves… when you look up ‘hilarious’ in the
dictionary, there’s a picture of you” (5). Oskar even mentioned to himself that he
“couldn’t tell if he liked me (him) or not” (5), having trouble realizing why the man
wouldn’t enjoy talking to him. In addition, the people outside his family whom Oskar
associates himself with are either older or younger than him, such as the elderly A.R.
Black who lives above him and the older man he befriends who he thinks is his
grandmother’s renter (257). Oskar also receives a lot of teasing and bullying from
Green 5
children his own age, as when he mentions how Jimmy Snyder “made the lives of nerds
like me (Oskar) and Toothpaste and [sic] The Minch almost impossible, of imitating
mental retards” (146). Oskar’s clumsy and direct social approaches, along with the lack
of peers and torment he receives from children his own age, has certainly proved to be a
difficult task for him to handle and are all commonalities of having social symptoms of
Asperger Syndrome.
Along with the verbal impairments patients with Asperger Syndrome have in
social interactions, AS patients are known to misinterpret a variety of social cues and
norms because of their different “common sense” (Shaked and Yirmiya 108). AS
patients are also known to cause confusion in others due to their written or verbal
“idiosyncrasies” (104), where an AS patient sees language only in a literal sense,
generally not comprehending slang and other colloquial terms (DuCharme and McGrady
5). Because AS people may lack those basic rules of “social conduct, they are liable to
say or do things inadvertently that may offend or annoy others” (Shaked and Yirmiya
108). In conversation, people use many different ways to communicate their feelings
towards others. Using hand gestures and body language, performing eye contact, and
using facial cues and mouth movement are all ways that common people display feelings
and ideas towards each other in communication. Unlike most people who would use
these aspects to convey a position in conversation, AS people often use “inappropriate
body language” (106), and thus do not always “recognize others’ intentions” (106) or
emotions though nonverbal communication. Because of nonverbal miscommunication
with others, AS patients can be misunderstood due to their “wooden quality” (107) of
facial features which provides a further barrier in conversation with the “NT.”
Green 6
While it may be more difficult to observe in a novel setting, Oskar Schell’s
relationships with others and their reactions to his personality provides enough substance
to analyze the nonverbal cues or reciprocity to others in a social setting. As previously
stated, Oskar sometimes performs rather carelessly with people in his class (Foer 189).
The bully Jimmy Snyder asked him who Buckminster was and after Oskar’s first very
scientific and precise answer about the actual scientist Richard Buckminster Fuller, Oskar
claims, “Buckminster is my pussy” (190). While taken literally, this word is just a “cat,”
but in slang-terms it has the negative connotation of a body part. Because of Oskar’s
sense of literal interpretation, Oskar unknowingly and inappropriately acted a certain way
that resulted in his classmates tormenting him. After this remark, Oskar wonders why he
“didn’t get what was so hilarious” (190) and was genuinely confused to why he was
being laughed at by his peers. Likewise, in Oskar’s conversation with the locksmith, he
does not understand that when someone says the slang word “shoot,” it means to ask a
question or “go ahead” (39). These two examples are not only a lack of understanding in
metaphors and slang, but also the “extreme literalness” (Bogdashina 181) a person with
AS comprehends in his or her mind. In addition to his lack of understanding about
unofficial English rules, Oskar’s ability to sense other’s emotions and “place himself in
other people’s shoes” seems to be somewhat limited. In his visit to Ada Black, Oskar
tells her maid that her “uniform is incredibly beautiful” and that “Gail is a beautiful
name” (150). Gail was very taken aback at these comments, and Ada remarks that his
compliments made Gail “quite uncomfortable… I could tell that she felt embarrassed”
(150). Of course, Oskar was trying to be friendly with the main, but in his remarks he did
not understand how he made her feel. While Oskar often claims the sadness he faces
Green 7
about losing his father, his “detachment from others’ feelings” (Shaked and Yirmiya 105)
affects how he understands how others around him, especially family and friends, feel
about the same subject or other such hardships: he constantly criticizes his mother for
trying to “replace” her husband with her new friend Ron and how she does not miss
Thomas (Foer 170). Oskar states that because he hears her laughing and rarely crying,
she must not miss him, while in reality, his mother is just coping in a different way than
her son (171). Furthermore, when Oskar says, “if I could have chosen, I would have
chosen you” (171) about her dying instead of his father, she becomes very silent and
extremely hurt, and while Oskar does recognize that he hurt her feelings, he’s unsure
about whether she’s mad or sad and is unsure about how to show his sympathy to absolve
their differences (172). Oskar Schell displays a misunderstanding of social gestures,
reactions, and others’ emotions, which are all prime examples of some nonverbal
communication issues present in people with Asperger Syndrome.
Another significant and very recognizable trait in patients with Asperger
Syndrome is seen in one’s hobbies, interests, and obsessions (APA 388). Mentally, AS
patients have a “narrow or intense focus on particular topics” (388), which they are very
knowledgeable in. Physically, AS patients have “repetitive motor mannerisms” (388),
including a “preoccupation with parts of objects” (388). To begin on the topic of subject-
focus, many people unfamiliar with the syndrome find AS people to be “egocentric”
(Shaked and Yirmiya 105) in conversation. Peter F. Gerhardt, a prominent researcher
and board member of Asperger Coalition of the United States, tells the story of one
patient in his focus on a particular subject: after much therapy and verbal skills, Brian
was able to converse on subjects other than his favorite topic (transportation). However,
Green 8
when placed into an actual social situation, every conversation Brian had “quickly
became focused on his interest in transportation” (Gerhardt 162). Afterwards, Brian
stated: “I know people find me boring and intrusive, but I find myself fascinating” (162).
Similar to an Obsessive-compulsive person, AS people perform mannerisms and
repetitive movements of their own (DuCharme and McGrady 12), and these actions may
range from hand-flapping to other such movements (APA 389). Moreover, an AS patient
may have an obsession with an “attachment to and holding [of] particular objects”
(Mayes and Calhoun 27). Lastly, outside of their narrow areas on interest, AS patients
usually have a superior intelligence quotient in comparison to that of an average person,
which most likely allows them to gather many facts and data as a result (DuCharme and
McGrady 8).
Oskar Schell has many obsessions of topics and stereotyped movements that he
displays throughout his adventure. Oskar Schell is constantly inventing from the start of
the novel: teakettles that can talk, skyscrapers that move around the elevator, and
microphones that play the sounds of a heart are just a few inventions to name from
Oskar’s vivid imagination (Foer 1). Indeed, unlike AS people’s one-topic focus, Oskar is
knowledgably in a wide range of topics. However, he does have a focus in each topic of
discussion, which usually involves proved scientific or mathematical data (94) or facts
that always somehow seem to relate back to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade
Center (3). During his journey, Oskar researches information that he believes would be
useful in his search, discovering how New York City has “319 post offices and 207,352
post office boxes…70,571 hotel rooms…4,425 buses” (40) and how a new lock is created
every 2.777 seconds in the city (52). This type of mathematical data is hardly of use to
Green 9
him in his search, and yet he still pursues in learning all he can about it. Likewise, Oskar
does many intelligent and higher-learning activities for his age, such as reading Stephen
Hawking’s A Brief History of Time (11) and inventing jewelry using Morse Code
messages (35), which most certainly infers he has at least an above-average IQ. In his
visit to Abby Black, Oskar starts a conversation with her about elephants stemmed from
the painting in her kitchen and begins to tell her random facts and information about them
(94). Abby, however, does not appear to be in the least bit interested in the conversation
and replies with simple, apathetic answers: Oskar’s “did you know?” type of personality
is found in most people with AS. Oskar also shows some AS compulsions and
preoccupations, as when he zips up her dress simply because he loves it (38). Also, along
with his obsession with carrying around his grandfather’s camera, he constantly shakes
his tambourine when walking: “I shook my tambourine the whole time, because it helped
me remember that even though I was going through different neighborhoods, I was still
me” (88). Oskar’s narrow interests and actions, along with his superior IQ and
knowledge of certain subjects and mathematical data are all prime examples of Oskar’s
traits that are also shared traits of people with Asperger Syndrome.
In the three paragraphs above, I have explained and demonstrated some of the
various criteria that people with Asperger Syndrome have, and have showed how Oskar
displays some form, from mild to moderate, of each of these symptoms; however,
because one is labeled as having a mental disorder, does not mean they are by any means
disabled or less well-off than those without any significant mental differences. In his
autobiography titled Living the Good life with Autism, Edgar Schneider has never
believed that him having Asperger Syndrome has been a disability: “autistic [sic] (and
Green 10
AS) people have a way of creating their own happiness, even if it is not in ways that the
NT would consider as being happy” (27). On the outside, most of the “NT” that have a
basic knowledge of this syndrome proclaim that it must be terrible to be “trapped inside
that terrible disability” (12), when in reality, AS people can be both very happy and far
from being disabled. Even so, Schneider himself has admitted that he and most people
with AS have suffered from the social impairments of the syndrome at one time or
another. Nevertheless, many the benefits are incredible, and while the social impairments
can hinder some areas of an AS person’s life, they are justly known as thinking with the
“head as opposed to the heart” (Schneider 15). The most notable benefit is the above
average to superior IQ, which most researchers of the syndrome today have highly agreed
to be present in many people with AS (DuCharme and McGrady 5). Moreover, people
with AS are incredibly accurate at perceiving and observing details that many “NT”
would not see or recognize, and are known to have a “good eye for detail” (Lyons and
Fitzgerald 47). As well as an excellent “rote” memory, people with Asperger Syndrome
are highly superior in systemized thinking, which involves math, science, engineering,
computer programming, and even music (Lyons and Fitzgerald 47). True, people with
AS are not known for their “emotional reciprocity” (APA 387), but many contain strong
skills in a particular field, known as “savant skills” (Lyons and Fitzgerald 43). Savant
skills are the incredibly strong techniques where one knows, memorizes in its entirety,
and becomes an expert at specific areas (Lyons and Fitzgerald 43). While these skills are
not only superior to that of an “NT” person, how is having expertise in a certain area any
different than what people do in their jobs and occupations every day? In defense to the
recognizable communication impairments, Schneider describes his lack of eye contact as
Green 11
“taking advantage of the fact that I can see both (a person and surroundings) quite well”
(Schneider 22). Lastly to mention, there are a significant amount of intellectual giants
who some believe had or had traits of Asperger Syndrome. One in particular, Albert
Einstein, had “no library, no laboratory, and no colleagues with whom to discuss things”
(24). The perceptiveness to “discern similarities and differences that many others tend to
miss entirely” (23) helped Einstein develop his own scientific theories, and can be
observed in people with AS. In conclusion, the many skills mentioned above represent
many areas of superiority a person with Asperger Syndrome has over “NT” persons, and
while the social aspects of their syndrome may negatively affect them at times, many
“have a zest for living that it’s [sic] very hard to duplicate” (123).
As observed throughout my essay, I have described the various ways that Oskar
Schell shows many of the definitive traits of having Asperger Syndrome in Jonathan
Safran Foer’s novel, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. Not only this is true, but in
addition to Oskar having AS, I believe it has helped him grown and mature throughout
his journey, as it has to many other people with the syndrome. After the death of any
loved one, people do become severely depressed and emotionally distressed. Oskar
Schell is no different: in losing his father and mentor, Oskar was extremely hurt as most
children his age would be (Foer 8). To begin, Oskar’s narrow ideas and obsession with
finding what his father had left behind is what first led him on his journey to find what
was missing (295). Oskar’s obsessions relating to the attacks on the World Trade Center
and the inventions he builds in his mind to help people, save lives, and keep him going all
seem to stem from the urge to save his father, which he could not (301). His narrow
interests and obsessions gave Oskar the drive to continue his journey (Gerhardt 162).
Green 12
Also previously mentioned, Oskar has a great capacity to memorize many different
pieces of information and from the very beginning of the novel he is seen to have a very
high IQ for his age (Foer 40). His intelligence was how he mapped out his journey: first,
finding New Yorkers with the last name of “Black,” then alphabetizing and mapping
them out for spending his weekends most efficiently (51). Another trait to mention on
the social end of the spectrum is Oskar not being able to understand others’ feelings and
motives (Shaked and Yirmiya 106). Indeed, Oskar has been bullied in his school because
of his differences, but the fact that he is not affected or hurt by any words of hate from his
enemies has showed that he can remain strong in times of distress (Foer 190). To
conclude, it is true that Oskar has had trouble developing relationships with his peers, but
he has throughout the course of his journey gained the trust, respect, and friendship of
many people older than him (254). His elderly companion, A.R. Black, even stated, “I’ve
loved being with you…you got me back into the world. That’s the greatest thing anyone
could have done for me” (254). Oskar not only gained an old, tired man’s
companionship, but he showed him what he was missing in his life. Oskar could not
have changed his new friends without his important trait seen in Asperger Syndrome: the
fact that he reaches out to others, even complete strangers, albeit sometimes clumsily
(Schneider 17). This trait has most definitely aided him the most in his story, and
because he has such a trust in newly-met people, they have trusted him and have given
back (Foer 286). So, while some of Oskar’s traits of Asperger Syndrome have negatively
affected noticeable aspects in his life, many have accelerated his life and have allowed
him to conclude the journey of him maturing and growing as a person.
Green 13
As seen throughout this essay, people with Asperger Syndrome do face many
challenges in their life, most significantly in the social aspect, but these people live just as
happy and fulfilling lives as anyone else (Schneider 123). There is not a cure that is
needed, as there is not necessarily anything to cure. The best thing that someone with
this syndrome can do is to realize their uniqueness, and use that knowledge to their
advantage in their growth and career (Schneider 108). In summary, I believe that no
average person could take on the journey that Oskar Schell did. Oskar had the drive, the
mental capacity, and the unique social skills to talk to every person he met about
finishing his journey that, in the end, matured him and allowed him to come to terms with
his father’s death. In the conclusion and most touching part of the novel, Oskar, finally
realizing his uniqueness, cries, “I don’t want to be hospitalized… I promise I’m going to
be better soon… I’ll be happy and normal” (323). His mother, who has known of her
son’s unique personality reassures him and tells him the truth: “there’s nothing wrong
with you” (323). Thus, I ask the ultimitate question: when do disabilities become
abilities? The answer is right in front of you.
Green 14
Works Cited
American Psychiatric Association. DSM-IV: Guidebook. 4th ed. Washington, DC:
American Psychiatric Press, 1995. Print.
Bogdashina, Olga. Communication Issues in Autism and Asperger Syndrome. London:
Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2005. Print.
DuCharme, Raymond W. and Kathleen A. McGrady. “What is Asperger Syndrome?”
Asperger Syndrome: A Guide for Professionals and Families. Ed. Raymond W.
DuCharme and Thomas P. Gullotta. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum
Publishers, 2003. 1-20. Print.
Foer, Jonathan Safran. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Company, 2005. Print.
Gerhardt, Peter F. “Transitional Support for Learners with Asperger Syndrome: Toward
Successful Adulthood.” Asperger Syndrome: A Guide for Professionals and
Families. Ed. Raymond W. DuCharme and Thomas P. Gullotta. New York:
Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2003. 157-171. Print.
Lyons, Viktoria and Michael Fitzgerald. Asperger Syndrome – A Gift or a
Curse? New York: Nova Biomedical Books, 2005. Print.
Mayes, Susan Dickerson and Susan L. Calhoun. “Relationship between Asperger
Syndrome and High-Functioning Autism.” Learning and Behavior Problems in
Asperger Syndrome. Ed. Margot Prior. New York: The Guilford Press, 2003.
15-34. Print.
Schneider, Edgar. Living the Good Life with Autism. London: Jessica Kingsley
Publishers, 2003. Print.
Green 15
Shaked, Michal and Nurit Yirmiya. “Understanding Social Difficulties.” Learning and
Behavior Problems in Asperger Syndrome. Ed. Margot Prior. New York: The
Guilford Press, 2003. 104-125. Print.
Tager-Flusberg, Helen. “Effects of Language and Communicative Deficits on Learning
and Behavior.” Learning and Behavior Problems in Asperger Syndrome. Ed.
Margot Prior. New York: The Guilford Press, 2003. 85-103. Print.

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Section 3 - Autistic Disorder
 

Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close

  • 1. Max Green Lynne Streeter ENG 112 NJ 03/14/12 Asperger Syndrome: Obstacles that Lead to Maturity Being mentally “challenged” is not as challenging as what most would believe; being “abnormal” does not mean one is that different; being “handicapped” is not necessarily such a disability. Mental disorders, syndromes, and disabilities are a significant part of our medical community today. For thousands of years, biological diseases have been the epicenter of human problems, but now that vaccines and antibiotics have been discovered, more focus is being turned towards the diseases of the mind; however, these “diseases” are not contagious and do not always cause sickness and death. A psychological problem is simply a mental function that is considered to be abnormal, or what the majority of humans do not have. One emerging mental syndrome in particular has been the subject of controversy in the medical community. This syndrome, known as Asperger Syndrome (AS), was first recognized and given a name to by Dr. Hans Asperger in the 1940’s (DuCharme and McGrady 1). Most of the debate around Asperger Syndrome lies in its broad criteria and its similarity to the more famous Autistic Disorder (DuCharme and McGrady 1). The way Autism differs from Asperger Syndrome is that AS has the following differential criteria: no significant verbal communication impairment, no delay in language use during childhood, and no delays in cognitive development and an overall curiosity for surroundings (DuCharme and McGrady 2). Moreover, many criteria for AS cannot always be studied with laboratory
  • 2. Green 2 observations, and so there is still a large amount of broad, self-interpreted traits and characteristics of AS that have yet to be fully agreed upon by the medical community. Thus, some of the broader and more easily-recognized criteria that will be discussed are as follows: significant social impairments in building and maintaining relationships with peers (Shaked and Yirmiya 109), a misunderstanding of social gestures (Shaked and Yirmiya 106), an above-average intelligence quotient (DuCharme and McGrady 8), narrow areas of interest (Gerhardt 162), misinterpretation of metaphorical words and phrases (Shaked and Yirmiya 107), and a repetition of certain actions or words (APA 389). People with AS struggle in some aspects of their daily life, but most significantly in their social interactions with others and the relationships they have with friends and family (Shaked and Yirmiya 104). Nonetheless, many AS people do not consider themselves to have any severe disorder when compared to the “NT” (“Neurotypical,” or people outside of the Autism Spectrum) people (Schneider 12). Oskar Schell, a fictional character who displays many noticeable and odd characteristics in his personality, will have his daily life and interactions with people put under a microscope in this essay, in the hopes of gaining further insight into his mind. Oskar is the main character of Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, and is a very unique child who has undergone many trials and tribulations in the past few years of his life. With the death of his father in the September 11th, 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center Towers, Oskar has become more distant from his mother and has suffered emotionally in many aspects of his day-to-day life. Due to the fact that Oskar acts very differently from his peers, one can possibly infer that he may have some kind of slight mental or development difference. After observing Oskar’s actions and doing more in-
  • 3. Green 3 depth research regarding mental disorders, I have theorized that he displays many symptoms of Asperger Syndrome, and may in fact fit the diagnosis. Additionally, does having the label “disorder” truly mean that one is less well-off than any other person? If Oskar truly does have AS, I believe that it may have actually helped him in his journey throughout the novel, allowing him to grow and mature into an adult. Asperger Syndrome has many characteristics, but the most notable to observe is the difficulty a patient have in their approach to interacting socially with others his or her own age (Shaked and Yirmiya 105). While the medical diagnosis of social functioning in AS is quite broad, patients with either AS or Autism are described as having a “lack of social or emotionally reciprocity” (APA 387). Many consider that AS patients, while having a an impairment in communication, can still converse, use language efficiently, and carry on conversations with people (Tager-Flusberg 92). The coup de grâce is that while AS patients make strong efforts and have a “willingness to engage in social contact” (Schneider 17) and interact with peers, their actions are often “clumsy and not successful” (Shaked and Yirmiya 109). Their words and sentence structure are occasionally “poorly organized” (106), with social skills that are “immature and rigid” (109), all while having difficulty understanding why others do not enjoy interacting with them (109). Also, patients seem “socially intrusive” (Little 139) by peers who do not understand their way of thought. Due to these issues an AS patient encounters, they sometimes become socially avoidant because of their awkward interactions and misunderstanding of peers (Shaked and Yirmiya 105). They begin to associate with others outside of their age group, both much younger or older, often having “preference to adult interaction” (DuCharme and McGrady 10), most likely because peers their own
  • 4. Green 4 age do not understand them. Humor and comedy does also not come easily for them to understand, having very different ideas of what is appropriate and considered the social norm (Shaked and Yirmiya 109). In addition to the above, bullying and teasing is a common action that occurs because of AS children’s “unusual interests and normal sociability” (Lyons and Fitzgerald 50). As mentioned before, Oskar Schell has many odd characteristics about himself that led me to observing him in greater detail in regards to a diagnosis of Asperger Syndrome. At first glance, one will notice that he has no friends his own age, other than “The Minch” (Foer 73) and “Toothpaste” (73), both actually tied as being below his doorman on a list of people most important to him. Oskar has no trouble whatsoever approaching, speaking fluently, and conversing with the people around him. In fact, Oskar is usually the instigator of his conversations and interactions: as seen in his discussion with the limousine driver, Oskar went out of his way to talk with him and tell him jokes and stories, trying to win over the limo driver’s friendship (5). However, Oskar had trouble in his speech organization, jumping around from topic to topic: “your sunglasses are one hundred dollars… do you know a lot of curse words?... succotash my Balzac, dipshiitake… cool driving gloves… when you look up ‘hilarious’ in the dictionary, there’s a picture of you” (5). Oskar even mentioned to himself that he “couldn’t tell if he liked me (him) or not” (5), having trouble realizing why the man wouldn’t enjoy talking to him. In addition, the people outside his family whom Oskar associates himself with are either older or younger than him, such as the elderly A.R. Black who lives above him and the older man he befriends who he thinks is his grandmother’s renter (257). Oskar also receives a lot of teasing and bullying from
  • 5. Green 5 children his own age, as when he mentions how Jimmy Snyder “made the lives of nerds like me (Oskar) and Toothpaste and [sic] The Minch almost impossible, of imitating mental retards” (146). Oskar’s clumsy and direct social approaches, along with the lack of peers and torment he receives from children his own age, has certainly proved to be a difficult task for him to handle and are all commonalities of having social symptoms of Asperger Syndrome. Along with the verbal impairments patients with Asperger Syndrome have in social interactions, AS patients are known to misinterpret a variety of social cues and norms because of their different “common sense” (Shaked and Yirmiya 108). AS patients are also known to cause confusion in others due to their written or verbal “idiosyncrasies” (104), where an AS patient sees language only in a literal sense, generally not comprehending slang and other colloquial terms (DuCharme and McGrady 5). Because AS people may lack those basic rules of “social conduct, they are liable to say or do things inadvertently that may offend or annoy others” (Shaked and Yirmiya 108). In conversation, people use many different ways to communicate their feelings towards others. Using hand gestures and body language, performing eye contact, and using facial cues and mouth movement are all ways that common people display feelings and ideas towards each other in communication. Unlike most people who would use these aspects to convey a position in conversation, AS people often use “inappropriate body language” (106), and thus do not always “recognize others’ intentions” (106) or emotions though nonverbal communication. Because of nonverbal miscommunication with others, AS patients can be misunderstood due to their “wooden quality” (107) of facial features which provides a further barrier in conversation with the “NT.”
  • 6. Green 6 While it may be more difficult to observe in a novel setting, Oskar Schell’s relationships with others and their reactions to his personality provides enough substance to analyze the nonverbal cues or reciprocity to others in a social setting. As previously stated, Oskar sometimes performs rather carelessly with people in his class (Foer 189). The bully Jimmy Snyder asked him who Buckminster was and after Oskar’s first very scientific and precise answer about the actual scientist Richard Buckminster Fuller, Oskar claims, “Buckminster is my pussy” (190). While taken literally, this word is just a “cat,” but in slang-terms it has the negative connotation of a body part. Because of Oskar’s sense of literal interpretation, Oskar unknowingly and inappropriately acted a certain way that resulted in his classmates tormenting him. After this remark, Oskar wonders why he “didn’t get what was so hilarious” (190) and was genuinely confused to why he was being laughed at by his peers. Likewise, in Oskar’s conversation with the locksmith, he does not understand that when someone says the slang word “shoot,” it means to ask a question or “go ahead” (39). These two examples are not only a lack of understanding in metaphors and slang, but also the “extreme literalness” (Bogdashina 181) a person with AS comprehends in his or her mind. In addition to his lack of understanding about unofficial English rules, Oskar’s ability to sense other’s emotions and “place himself in other people’s shoes” seems to be somewhat limited. In his visit to Ada Black, Oskar tells her maid that her “uniform is incredibly beautiful” and that “Gail is a beautiful name” (150). Gail was very taken aback at these comments, and Ada remarks that his compliments made Gail “quite uncomfortable… I could tell that she felt embarrassed” (150). Of course, Oskar was trying to be friendly with the main, but in his remarks he did not understand how he made her feel. While Oskar often claims the sadness he faces
  • 7. Green 7 about losing his father, his “detachment from others’ feelings” (Shaked and Yirmiya 105) affects how he understands how others around him, especially family and friends, feel about the same subject or other such hardships: he constantly criticizes his mother for trying to “replace” her husband with her new friend Ron and how she does not miss Thomas (Foer 170). Oskar states that because he hears her laughing and rarely crying, she must not miss him, while in reality, his mother is just coping in a different way than her son (171). Furthermore, when Oskar says, “if I could have chosen, I would have chosen you” (171) about her dying instead of his father, she becomes very silent and extremely hurt, and while Oskar does recognize that he hurt her feelings, he’s unsure about whether she’s mad or sad and is unsure about how to show his sympathy to absolve their differences (172). Oskar Schell displays a misunderstanding of social gestures, reactions, and others’ emotions, which are all prime examples of some nonverbal communication issues present in people with Asperger Syndrome. Another significant and very recognizable trait in patients with Asperger Syndrome is seen in one’s hobbies, interests, and obsessions (APA 388). Mentally, AS patients have a “narrow or intense focus on particular topics” (388), which they are very knowledgeable in. Physically, AS patients have “repetitive motor mannerisms” (388), including a “preoccupation with parts of objects” (388). To begin on the topic of subject- focus, many people unfamiliar with the syndrome find AS people to be “egocentric” (Shaked and Yirmiya 105) in conversation. Peter F. Gerhardt, a prominent researcher and board member of Asperger Coalition of the United States, tells the story of one patient in his focus on a particular subject: after much therapy and verbal skills, Brian was able to converse on subjects other than his favorite topic (transportation). However,
  • 8. Green 8 when placed into an actual social situation, every conversation Brian had “quickly became focused on his interest in transportation” (Gerhardt 162). Afterwards, Brian stated: “I know people find me boring and intrusive, but I find myself fascinating” (162). Similar to an Obsessive-compulsive person, AS people perform mannerisms and repetitive movements of their own (DuCharme and McGrady 12), and these actions may range from hand-flapping to other such movements (APA 389). Moreover, an AS patient may have an obsession with an “attachment to and holding [of] particular objects” (Mayes and Calhoun 27). Lastly, outside of their narrow areas on interest, AS patients usually have a superior intelligence quotient in comparison to that of an average person, which most likely allows them to gather many facts and data as a result (DuCharme and McGrady 8). Oskar Schell has many obsessions of topics and stereotyped movements that he displays throughout his adventure. Oskar Schell is constantly inventing from the start of the novel: teakettles that can talk, skyscrapers that move around the elevator, and microphones that play the sounds of a heart are just a few inventions to name from Oskar’s vivid imagination (Foer 1). Indeed, unlike AS people’s one-topic focus, Oskar is knowledgably in a wide range of topics. However, he does have a focus in each topic of discussion, which usually involves proved scientific or mathematical data (94) or facts that always somehow seem to relate back to the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center (3). During his journey, Oskar researches information that he believes would be useful in his search, discovering how New York City has “319 post offices and 207,352 post office boxes…70,571 hotel rooms…4,425 buses” (40) and how a new lock is created every 2.777 seconds in the city (52). This type of mathematical data is hardly of use to
  • 9. Green 9 him in his search, and yet he still pursues in learning all he can about it. Likewise, Oskar does many intelligent and higher-learning activities for his age, such as reading Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of Time (11) and inventing jewelry using Morse Code messages (35), which most certainly infers he has at least an above-average IQ. In his visit to Abby Black, Oskar starts a conversation with her about elephants stemmed from the painting in her kitchen and begins to tell her random facts and information about them (94). Abby, however, does not appear to be in the least bit interested in the conversation and replies with simple, apathetic answers: Oskar’s “did you know?” type of personality is found in most people with AS. Oskar also shows some AS compulsions and preoccupations, as when he zips up her dress simply because he loves it (38). Also, along with his obsession with carrying around his grandfather’s camera, he constantly shakes his tambourine when walking: “I shook my tambourine the whole time, because it helped me remember that even though I was going through different neighborhoods, I was still me” (88). Oskar’s narrow interests and actions, along with his superior IQ and knowledge of certain subjects and mathematical data are all prime examples of Oskar’s traits that are also shared traits of people with Asperger Syndrome. In the three paragraphs above, I have explained and demonstrated some of the various criteria that people with Asperger Syndrome have, and have showed how Oskar displays some form, from mild to moderate, of each of these symptoms; however, because one is labeled as having a mental disorder, does not mean they are by any means disabled or less well-off than those without any significant mental differences. In his autobiography titled Living the Good life with Autism, Edgar Schneider has never believed that him having Asperger Syndrome has been a disability: “autistic [sic] (and
  • 10. Green 10 AS) people have a way of creating their own happiness, even if it is not in ways that the NT would consider as being happy” (27). On the outside, most of the “NT” that have a basic knowledge of this syndrome proclaim that it must be terrible to be “trapped inside that terrible disability” (12), when in reality, AS people can be both very happy and far from being disabled. Even so, Schneider himself has admitted that he and most people with AS have suffered from the social impairments of the syndrome at one time or another. Nevertheless, many the benefits are incredible, and while the social impairments can hinder some areas of an AS person’s life, they are justly known as thinking with the “head as opposed to the heart” (Schneider 15). The most notable benefit is the above average to superior IQ, which most researchers of the syndrome today have highly agreed to be present in many people with AS (DuCharme and McGrady 5). Moreover, people with AS are incredibly accurate at perceiving and observing details that many “NT” would not see or recognize, and are known to have a “good eye for detail” (Lyons and Fitzgerald 47). As well as an excellent “rote” memory, people with Asperger Syndrome are highly superior in systemized thinking, which involves math, science, engineering, computer programming, and even music (Lyons and Fitzgerald 47). True, people with AS are not known for their “emotional reciprocity” (APA 387), but many contain strong skills in a particular field, known as “savant skills” (Lyons and Fitzgerald 43). Savant skills are the incredibly strong techniques where one knows, memorizes in its entirety, and becomes an expert at specific areas (Lyons and Fitzgerald 43). While these skills are not only superior to that of an “NT” person, how is having expertise in a certain area any different than what people do in their jobs and occupations every day? In defense to the recognizable communication impairments, Schneider describes his lack of eye contact as
  • 11. Green 11 “taking advantage of the fact that I can see both (a person and surroundings) quite well” (Schneider 22). Lastly to mention, there are a significant amount of intellectual giants who some believe had or had traits of Asperger Syndrome. One in particular, Albert Einstein, had “no library, no laboratory, and no colleagues with whom to discuss things” (24). The perceptiveness to “discern similarities and differences that many others tend to miss entirely” (23) helped Einstein develop his own scientific theories, and can be observed in people with AS. In conclusion, the many skills mentioned above represent many areas of superiority a person with Asperger Syndrome has over “NT” persons, and while the social aspects of their syndrome may negatively affect them at times, many “have a zest for living that it’s [sic] very hard to duplicate” (123). As observed throughout my essay, I have described the various ways that Oskar Schell shows many of the definitive traits of having Asperger Syndrome in Jonathan Safran Foer’s novel, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. Not only this is true, but in addition to Oskar having AS, I believe it has helped him grown and mature throughout his journey, as it has to many other people with the syndrome. After the death of any loved one, people do become severely depressed and emotionally distressed. Oskar Schell is no different: in losing his father and mentor, Oskar was extremely hurt as most children his age would be (Foer 8). To begin, Oskar’s narrow ideas and obsession with finding what his father had left behind is what first led him on his journey to find what was missing (295). Oskar’s obsessions relating to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the inventions he builds in his mind to help people, save lives, and keep him going all seem to stem from the urge to save his father, which he could not (301). His narrow interests and obsessions gave Oskar the drive to continue his journey (Gerhardt 162).
  • 12. Green 12 Also previously mentioned, Oskar has a great capacity to memorize many different pieces of information and from the very beginning of the novel he is seen to have a very high IQ for his age (Foer 40). His intelligence was how he mapped out his journey: first, finding New Yorkers with the last name of “Black,” then alphabetizing and mapping them out for spending his weekends most efficiently (51). Another trait to mention on the social end of the spectrum is Oskar not being able to understand others’ feelings and motives (Shaked and Yirmiya 106). Indeed, Oskar has been bullied in his school because of his differences, but the fact that he is not affected or hurt by any words of hate from his enemies has showed that he can remain strong in times of distress (Foer 190). To conclude, it is true that Oskar has had trouble developing relationships with his peers, but he has throughout the course of his journey gained the trust, respect, and friendship of many people older than him (254). His elderly companion, A.R. Black, even stated, “I’ve loved being with you…you got me back into the world. That’s the greatest thing anyone could have done for me” (254). Oskar not only gained an old, tired man’s companionship, but he showed him what he was missing in his life. Oskar could not have changed his new friends without his important trait seen in Asperger Syndrome: the fact that he reaches out to others, even complete strangers, albeit sometimes clumsily (Schneider 17). This trait has most definitely aided him the most in his story, and because he has such a trust in newly-met people, they have trusted him and have given back (Foer 286). So, while some of Oskar’s traits of Asperger Syndrome have negatively affected noticeable aspects in his life, many have accelerated his life and have allowed him to conclude the journey of him maturing and growing as a person.
  • 13. Green 13 As seen throughout this essay, people with Asperger Syndrome do face many challenges in their life, most significantly in the social aspect, but these people live just as happy and fulfilling lives as anyone else (Schneider 123). There is not a cure that is needed, as there is not necessarily anything to cure. The best thing that someone with this syndrome can do is to realize their uniqueness, and use that knowledge to their advantage in their growth and career (Schneider 108). In summary, I believe that no average person could take on the journey that Oskar Schell did. Oskar had the drive, the mental capacity, and the unique social skills to talk to every person he met about finishing his journey that, in the end, matured him and allowed him to come to terms with his father’s death. In the conclusion and most touching part of the novel, Oskar, finally realizing his uniqueness, cries, “I don’t want to be hospitalized… I promise I’m going to be better soon… I’ll be happy and normal” (323). His mother, who has known of her son’s unique personality reassures him and tells him the truth: “there’s nothing wrong with you” (323). Thus, I ask the ultimitate question: when do disabilities become abilities? The answer is right in front of you.
  • 14. Green 14 Works Cited American Psychiatric Association. DSM-IV: Guidebook. 4th ed. Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Press, 1995. Print. Bogdashina, Olga. Communication Issues in Autism and Asperger Syndrome. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2005. Print. DuCharme, Raymond W. and Kathleen A. McGrady. “What is Asperger Syndrome?” Asperger Syndrome: A Guide for Professionals and Families. Ed. Raymond W. DuCharme and Thomas P. Gullotta. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2003. 1-20. Print. Foer, Jonathan Safran. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company, 2005. Print. Gerhardt, Peter F. “Transitional Support for Learners with Asperger Syndrome: Toward Successful Adulthood.” Asperger Syndrome: A Guide for Professionals and Families. Ed. Raymond W. DuCharme and Thomas P. Gullotta. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2003. 157-171. Print. Lyons, Viktoria and Michael Fitzgerald. Asperger Syndrome – A Gift or a Curse? New York: Nova Biomedical Books, 2005. Print. Mayes, Susan Dickerson and Susan L. Calhoun. “Relationship between Asperger Syndrome and High-Functioning Autism.” Learning and Behavior Problems in Asperger Syndrome. Ed. Margot Prior. New York: The Guilford Press, 2003. 15-34. Print. Schneider, Edgar. Living the Good Life with Autism. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2003. Print.
  • 15. Green 15 Shaked, Michal and Nurit Yirmiya. “Understanding Social Difficulties.” Learning and Behavior Problems in Asperger Syndrome. Ed. Margot Prior. New York: The Guilford Press, 2003. 104-125. Print. Tager-Flusberg, Helen. “Effects of Language and Communicative Deficits on Learning and Behavior.” Learning and Behavior Problems in Asperger Syndrome. Ed. Margot Prior. New York: The Guilford Press, 2003. 85-103. Print.