Genie

Popular As Genie (feral child)

Birthday April 18, 1957

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Arcadia, California, U.S.

Age 66 years old

Nationality United States

#3630 Most Popular

1957

Genie (born 1957) is the pseudonym of an American feral child who was a victim of severe abuse, neglect, and social isolation.

Her circumstances are prominently recorded in the annals of linguistics and abnormal child psychology.

When she was approximately 20 months old, her father began keeping her in a locked room.

During this period, he almost always strapped her to a child's toilet or bound her in a crib with her arms and legs immobilized, forbade anyone from interacting with her, provided her with almost no stimulation of any kind, and left her severely malnourished.

The extent of her isolation prevented her from being exposed to any significant amount of speech, and as a result she did not acquire language during her childhood.

1970

Her abuse came to the attention of Los Angeles County child welfare authorities in November 1970, when she was 13 years and 7 months old, after which she became a ward of the state of California.

Psychologists, linguists, and other scientists almost immediately focused a great deal of attention on Genie's case.

Upon determining that she had not yet learned language, linguists saw her as providing an opportunity to gain further insight into the processes controlling language acquisition skills and to test theories and hypotheses identifying critical periods during which humans learn to understand and use language.

Throughout the time scientists studied Genie, she made substantial advances in her overall mental and psychological development.

Within months, she developed exceptional nonverbal communication skills and gradually learned some basic social skills, but even by the end of their case study, she still exhibited many behavioral traits characteristic of an unsocialized person.

She also continued to learn and use new language skills throughout the time they tested her, but ultimately remained unable to fully acquire a first language.

Authorities initially arranged for Genie's admission to the Children's Hospital Los Angeles, where a team of physicians and psychologists managed her care for several months.

Her subsequent living arrangements became the subject of rancorous debate.

1971

In June 1971, she left the hospital to live with her teacher, but a month and a half later authorities placed her with the family of The Scientist heading the research team, with whom she lived for almost four years.

Soon after turning 18, she returned to live with her mother, who decided after a few months that she could not adequately care for her.

Authorities then moved her into the first of what would become a series of institutions and foster homes for disabled adults.

The people running these facilities isolated her from almost everyone she knew and subjected her to extreme physical and emotional abuse.

As a result, her physical and mental health severely deteriorated, and her newly acquired language and behavioral skills very rapidly regressed.

1978

In early January 1978, Genie's mother abruptly forbade all scientific observations and testing of her.

Little is known about her circumstances since then.

2016

Her current whereabouts are uncertain, although, as of 2016, she was believed to be living in the care of the state of California.

Psychologists and linguists continue to discuss her, and there is considerable academic and media interest in her development and the research team's methods.

2019

In particular, scientists have compared her to Victor of Aveyron, a 19th-century French child who was also the subject of a case study in delayed psychological development and late language acquisition.

Genie was the last, and also second surviving, of four children born to parents living in Arcadia, California.

Her father worked in a factory as a flight mechanic during World War II and continued in aviation afterward, and her mother, who was around 20 years younger and from an Oklahoma farming family, had come to Southern California as a teenager with family friends who were fleeing the Dust Bowl.

As a young child, Genie's mother sustained a severe head injury in an accident, giving her lingering neurological damage that caused degenerative vision problems in one eye.

Genie's father mostly grew up in orphanages in the American Pacific Northwest.

His father was killed by a lightning strike, and his mother ran a brothel while infrequently seeing him.

Additionally, his mother gave him a feminine first name, which made him the target of constant derision.

As a result, he harbored extreme resentment toward his mother during childhood, which Genie's brother and the scientists who studied Genie believed was the cause of his subsequent anger problems.

When Genie's father reached adulthood, he changed his first name to one which was more typically masculine, and his mother began to spend as much time with him as she could.

He became almost singularly fixated on his mother, despite having relentless arguments over her attempts to convince him to adopt a less rigid lifestyle, and therefore came to treat all other relationships as secondary at best.

Although Genie's parents initially seemed happy to those who knew them, soon after they married he prevented her from leaving home and beat her with increasing frequency and severity.

Her eyesight steadily deteriorated as a result of lingering effects from her existing neurological damage, the onset of severe cataracts, and a detached retina in one eye, leaving her progressively more dependent on him.

Genie's father disliked children and wanted none of his own, finding them noisy; however, around five years into their marriage, his wife became pregnant.

He beat her throughout the pregnancy, and near the end attempted to strangle her to death; she was in the hospital recovering from this when she gave birth to an apparently healthy daughter.

Her father found her crying disturbing and placed her in the garage, where she caught pneumonia and died at the age of ten weeks.

Their second child, born approximately a year later, was a boy diagnosed with Rh incompatibility who died at two days of age; accounts vary as to whether his death was the result of complications of Rh incompatibility or from choking on his own mucus.

Three years later they had another son, who doctors described as healthy despite also having Rh incompatibility.

His father forced his wife to keep him quiet, causing significant physical and linguistic developmental delays.