This article re-examines the 1980s anti-gay ‘backlash’ using the testimonies of around 600 largely heterosexual Mass Observers (MOers) in the UK writing in response to a directive issued on the AIDS crisis in 1987. It explores the political, generational and geographical divisions that emerge through these testimonies. It also considers the near consensus amongst MOers about promiscuity and the terms on which homosexuality was deemed acceptable. This pivots on a rhetoric and rationale familiar from the Wolfenden report of 1957 and ensuing debate in the 1960s. It contrasts sharply with testimonies on the AIDS crisis submitted by around 160 gay men to the parallel (and similarly formulated) National Lesbian and Gay Survey. The tension betwee...
In 1984, I first heard about the homosexual disease . The following days passed in shame and fear; s...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate how the Swedish AIDS epidemic waspresented in media, and...
This thesis investigates print media discourse on gay families in the context of HIV/AIDS and the ga...
This article focuses on the West German gay subculture and its early reactions to the HIV/AIDS epide...
This article presents a framework through which changes in the management of HIV/AIDS risks among Br...
As the incidence of AIDS increases, its social, political and economic consequences are considerable...
As we enter the third decade of a devastating worldwide epidemic, much has been done to stem the flo...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Lexington BooksHistorian...
The decade of the 1980s in England saw the emergence of HIV and AIDS, a new illness which involved ...
Upon its emergence in the western world in the early 1980s, AIDS marked the beginning of a new chapt...
The emergence of the AIDS epidemic in New York ignited debates about the perceived centrality of ‘pr...
With the emergence of AIDS in the mid-1980s, both media and politics were quick to offer a public di...
The emergence of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Britain in 1982 coincided almost exactly ...
This article is the first to explore Norwegian HIV/AIDS policy and activism. Drawing on a range of a...
This Article argues that we ought to examine this country’s early AIDS crisis for lessons on address...
In 1984, I first heard about the homosexual disease . The following days passed in shame and fear; s...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate how the Swedish AIDS epidemic waspresented in media, and...
This thesis investigates print media discourse on gay families in the context of HIV/AIDS and the ga...
This article focuses on the West German gay subculture and its early reactions to the HIV/AIDS epide...
This article presents a framework through which changes in the management of HIV/AIDS risks among Br...
As the incidence of AIDS increases, its social, political and economic consequences are considerable...
As we enter the third decade of a devastating worldwide epidemic, much has been done to stem the flo...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Lexington BooksHistorian...
The decade of the 1980s in England saw the emergence of HIV and AIDS, a new illness which involved ...
Upon its emergence in the western world in the early 1980s, AIDS marked the beginning of a new chapt...
The emergence of the AIDS epidemic in New York ignited debates about the perceived centrality of ‘pr...
With the emergence of AIDS in the mid-1980s, both media and politics were quick to offer a public di...
The emergence of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Britain in 1982 coincided almost exactly ...
This article is the first to explore Norwegian HIV/AIDS policy and activism. Drawing on a range of a...
This Article argues that we ought to examine this country’s early AIDS crisis for lessons on address...
In 1984, I first heard about the homosexual disease . The following days passed in shame and fear; s...
The purpose of this essay is to investigate how the Swedish AIDS epidemic waspresented in media, and...
This thesis investigates print media discourse on gay families in the context of HIV/AIDS and the ga...