2004
DOI: 10.1080/0305707042000254146
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'Long live Zackie, long live': AIDS activism, science and citizenship after apartheid

Abstract: More details/abstract: This article analyses the complex cultural politics of HIV/AIDS in South Africa. It focuses on how AIDS 'dissident' science impacted on policy discourses and how AIDS activists, together with scientists, the media and health professionals, responded. It also shows how the HIV/AIDS debate and struggles over access to treatment were framed by historically embedded cultural and political interpretations of AIDS that were a product of South Africa's apartheid and post-apartheid history. Howe… Show more

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Cited by 158 publications
(106 citation statements)
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“…This stress on normalcy and on participating in society is in stark contrast to what Nguyen (2010) and Robins (2004) report on the transformation of hiv positive people in Western Africa or South Africa. What Nguyen calls 'therapeutic citizenship' is the result of a near-death experience that many hiv-positive people in West Africa share.…”
Section: Towards Republican Citizenship In the Global Southcontrasting
confidence: 47%
“…This stress on normalcy and on participating in society is in stark contrast to what Nguyen (2010) and Robins (2004) report on the transformation of hiv positive people in Western Africa or South Africa. What Nguyen calls 'therapeutic citizenship' is the result of a near-death experience that many hiv-positive people in West Africa share.…”
Section: Towards Republican Citizenship In the Global Southcontrasting
confidence: 47%
“…Counsellors go beyond their usual professional boundaries; social workers take a therapeutic role; neighbourhoods develop structures of 'HIV competence' (Campbell et al, 2007). In South Africa, HIV activism has invented itself out of transnational as well as local political histories, and from new and older local cultural formations (Mbali, 2005;Robins, 2004). These new formations, avoiding structural and procedural rigidity, mobilise abjection alongside 'living positively,' without being overwhelmed by it.…”
Section: Problems Of Hiv Experiencesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These notions, though different, highlight a similar mobilization of patients toward the production and circulation of medical knowledge. This phenomenon was described in various countries including the United States (Epstein 1995(Epstein , 1996, France (Dodier and Barbot 2000), South Africa (Robins 2004), Brazil (Biehl 2004), West Africa (Nguyen 2010), and Thailand (Krikorian 2014). In the Global South, the necessity for groups of patients to interfere in the medical territory rests on the fact that medical decisions are complicated by a series of factors, some of which are not at all or less present than in the North:…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%