The first generation of government AIDS campaigns in Australia, Britain and the United States directed at heterosexuals reproduced bioscientific discursive formulations and commentaries which had identified the initial locus in infectious queered bodies. In representations and narrations, the campaigns likened the anticipated heterosexual plague to a pastiche of 'dangerous' gay proclivities and perverse practices. In attempting to normalise HIV infection, the campaigns sought to breach the historically contrived categorical distinctions between faggots and straights. They failed because the commentaries and imaginaries replicated that which they sought to disown: the natur[at]ed distinction between queer bodies and straight practices
Technology not only facilitates the development of new body images, by demonstrating that intercorpo...
This article traces the development of the illness of homosexuality from its legal origins through i...
Queer people present interesting challenges to sexual health care because they often defy dominant u...
Ecofeminism (Silvey 1998) and Queer Ecology (Gandy 2012) highlight relations among gender, sexuality...
We could easily characterise the emergent field of posthumanism as a critique of various forms of bo...
The thesis addresses the question of the relationship between biomedical AIDS discourse and the sexu...
The AIDS epidemic in 1980s and 1990s America can—and must—be read not simply as an epidemic of disea...
As the incidence of AIDS increases, its social, political and economic consequences are considerable...
In this paper I examine the emergence of a popular geography of AIDS in the US mass media in the 198...
Before the isolation of HIV as the causal agent for AIDS in 1984, mainstream medical authorities uni...
Gay men have been severely affected by the AIDS crisis, and gay subjectivity, sexual ethics, and pol...
This study analyses contemporary cultural representations of HIV/AIDS suffering in the English-speak...
In the early HIV epidemic, Western media coverage encouraged the idea that infection was linked to `...
A thesis which examines the rhetoric used when describing and discussing AIDS, especially in the Aus...
This article focuses on the West German gay subculture and its early reactions to the HIV/AIDS epide...
Technology not only facilitates the development of new body images, by demonstrating that intercorpo...
This article traces the development of the illness of homosexuality from its legal origins through i...
Queer people present interesting challenges to sexual health care because they often defy dominant u...
Ecofeminism (Silvey 1998) and Queer Ecology (Gandy 2012) highlight relations among gender, sexuality...
We could easily characterise the emergent field of posthumanism as a critique of various forms of bo...
The thesis addresses the question of the relationship between biomedical AIDS discourse and the sexu...
The AIDS epidemic in 1980s and 1990s America can—and must—be read not simply as an epidemic of disea...
As the incidence of AIDS increases, its social, political and economic consequences are considerable...
In this paper I examine the emergence of a popular geography of AIDS in the US mass media in the 198...
Before the isolation of HIV as the causal agent for AIDS in 1984, mainstream medical authorities uni...
Gay men have been severely affected by the AIDS crisis, and gay subjectivity, sexual ethics, and pol...
This study analyses contemporary cultural representations of HIV/AIDS suffering in the English-speak...
In the early HIV epidemic, Western media coverage encouraged the idea that infection was linked to `...
A thesis which examines the rhetoric used when describing and discussing AIDS, especially in the Aus...
This article focuses on the West German gay subculture and its early reactions to the HIV/AIDS epide...
Technology not only facilitates the development of new body images, by demonstrating that intercorpo...
This article traces the development of the illness of homosexuality from its legal origins through i...
Queer people present interesting challenges to sexual health care because they often defy dominant u...