
Practices of Freedom
Selected Writings on HIV/AIDS
Simon Watney(Author)
Duke University Press
Published on 12. October 1994
Book
Paperback/Softback
312 pages
978-0-8223-1564-3 (ISBN)
Description
Since the mid-1980s, Simon Watney has been one of the leading voices in the international field of HIV/AIDS education. His monthly column on AIDS in Britain's Gay Times is the longest-running column of its kind in Europe, and he is actively involved in HIV/AIDS issues in the United States. His work constitutes a unique dialogue between European and American perspectives on the epidemic. Practices of Freedom brings together for the first time Watney's pioneering writings on topics ranging from gay men's Safer Sex education to racist coverage of AIDS in Africa in the international media, from the ethics of clinical drug trials to governmental policies concerning AIDS. Watney's voice-neither neutral nor detached-is that of an active and influential participant in the fight against AIDS. He offers a unique view of the ways in which gay men working in community-based organizations have attempted to provide reliable and up-to-date services and information regarding AIDS treatment and health. A leader in insisting on gay men's entitlements to education, care, and services, Watney was among the first to challenge the "de-gaying" of AIDS service organizations in the late eighties.
He also devotes his attention to HIV/AIDS prevention work, research and treatment issues, and the wider cultural politics of the disease, including the role of language, television, and cinema. His analysis of the epidemic as it has unfolded provides a history of many of the major medical and political debates that have defined the course and extent of the crisis. Practices of Freedom demonstrates the failure of national institutions, from the government to the press, to understand and effectively fight this epidemic, and directs attention to the most urgent needs in American and international AIDS work. It will be an important primary resource, particularly in the United States, where effective community-based HIV/AIDS education tragically has often been neglected.
He also devotes his attention to HIV/AIDS prevention work, research and treatment issues, and the wider cultural politics of the disease, including the role of language, television, and cinema. His analysis of the epidemic as it has unfolded provides a history of many of the major medical and political debates that have defined the course and extent of the crisis. Practices of Freedom demonstrates the failure of national institutions, from the government to the press, to understand and effectively fight this epidemic, and directs attention to the most urgent needs in American and international AIDS work. It will be an important primary resource, particularly in the United States, where effective community-based HIV/AIDS education tragically has often been neglected.
Reviews / Votes
"In reading Simon Watney's essays we witness the pain, anger, and brilliance of one of the most longstanding AIDS activists and critics. How fortunate we are to finally have this work collected in a single volume."-Cindy Patton, author of Inventing AIDS "Simon Watney provides a thought provoking analysis of the profound cultural crises generated by the AIDS epidemic."-Dr. Joseph Sonnabend, Community Research Initiative on AIDSMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
North Carolina
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Dimensions
Height: 236 mm
Width: 151 mm
Thickness: 21 mm
Weight
526 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-8223-1564-3 (9780822315643)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Simon Watney is Director of the Red Hot AIDS Charitable Trust in the U. K., a funding initiative for community-based HIV prevention work. He is the author of several books, including Policing Desire: Pornography, AIDS, and the Media, and coeditor of Taking Liberties: AIDS and Cultural Politics. He has published more than 250 articles on HIV/AIDS, and his work has appeared in October, the Village Voice, High Performance, Screen, and Artforum, among other publications.
Content
Acknowledgments ix Preface: My project xi 1986 1. AIDS, 'Moral Panic' Theory, and Homophobia 3 1987 2. Visual AIDS: Advertising Ignorance 17 3. The Subject of AIDS 22 4. The Politics of AIDS 31 1988 5. Talking to the Future: Gay rights in Britain and the USA 39 6. The Spectacle of AIDS 46 7. Photography and AIDS 60 8. 'AIDS' or 'HIV Disease'? 76 9. 'The Day After Hiroshima': Reflections on official British and Swedish AIDS education materials and government policies 79 10. Cross-Over: A film by Steffan Hildebrand 90 11. Politics, People and the AIDS Epidemic: And The Band Played On 98 1989 12. Missionary Positions: AIDS, 'Africa,' and race 103 13. Young People and AIDS 121 14. Community Responsibilities 124 15. Safer Sex as Community Practice 127 1990 16. Re-gaying AIDS 145 17. Practices of Freedom: 'Citizenship' and the politics of identity in the age of AIDS 148 18. AIDS, The Second Decade: 'Risk,' research and moernity 160 19. Silence Equals Death 178 1991 20. State of Emergency 187 21. Perspectives on Testing 191 22. Perspectives on Treatment 194 23. Short-Term Companions: AIDS and 'popular' entertainment 197 24. AIDS and Social Science: Taking the scenic route through an emergency 221 1992 25. Muddling Through: The UK responses to AIDS 231 26. Duesberg's Dangerous Dogma 244 27. Bad, Mad and Dangerous 247 28. Political Funerals 250 29. Gay Teenagers and Gay Politics 253 30. Powers of Observation: AIDS and the writing of history 256 Notes 267 Index 283