Beschreibung:
This book examines the discourse of a "post-AIDS" culture, and the medical-discursive shift from crisis and death to survival and living.
Dreaming a Post-AIDS: An Introduction to the Discourse; Part I: Debate, Discourse, Politics; 1. Revisiting "Post-AIDS": Understanding Gay Community Responses to HIV Then and Now; 2. Biocommunicability and the Biopolitics of "Post-AIDS"; 3. Last People Standing: People Living with HIV After the 'End of the Epidemic'; 4. A Dramatization of Post-AIDs Stigma: A Pentadic Analysis of the CDC's "Let's Stop HIV Together" Campaign; 5. Indigenous HIV/AIDS in the Context of 'Post-AIDS' Discourse: A Meta-Synthesis of Qualitative Research; 6. Neoliberal Hegemony and National HIV/AIDS Policy in India; Part II: Rhetorics and Relations; 7. "I Might as Well Be Dead": Aging with HIV in the "Post-AIDS" Era; 8. African American Mothers Living with HIV in the "Post-AIDS" Era: A Meta-Ethnographic Synthesis; 9. "YOU FUCKING DESERVE HIV": Seeking PrEP information, Disciplinary Power, and Queer Technologies of the Self on /r/AskGayBros; 10. Intimacy Uncertainty and Post-AIDS Discourse: HIV and the Role It Plays as an Uninvited Third Party in Serodiscordant Relationships; 11. The Experience of Building and Testing a Visual Health Literacy Resource for HIV Prophylaxis; Afterword: On Localocentricity and "Post-AIDS"