The present paper tries to focus on the famous psychological defence mechanism, Sublimation, its causes and effects in the Memoir and the Creative Narrative Reach for the Moon. As the cognitive impairments are not visible to the public, it becomes a necessity to mask her identity and pretend to be like the other so-called normal beings to cope with the Ableist society in which they live. It gives a brief account of the necessity to mask her identity and her helplessness in social gatherings. book Samantha Abeel, the author and main character of My Thirteenth Winter, wrote and published when she was just fifteen. Samantha Abeels My Thirteenth Winter: A Memoir, talks about her life as a person and a student with Dyscalculia. Disability in literature is not yet widely talked about and Cognitive impairment and their stereotypes are often considered a taboo in India and are not represented widely like physical disabilities. It came into existence in the 1990s, after the passage of the Americans with Disability Act. It takes its origin from Queer theory and Postcolonialism. My Thirteenth Winter: A Memoir By Samantha Abeel (Dysgraphia, girl) The Rosie Project by Graeme Simison (Fiction, man, autism, a little trite, but quite charming) Raising Twice-Exceptional Children: A Handbook for Parents of Neurodivergent Gifted Kids by Emily Kircher-Morris. Â Disability studies is one of the emerging branches in literature.
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