In this paper, I examine activist group ACT UP's campaign to change the US Centers for Disease Control surveillance case definition of HIV and AIDS. This campaign's effects included a profound shift in how AIDS is understood, and thus in some real way in what it is. I argue that classification should be understood as a political formation with material effects, attending to the words of activists, most of them women, who contested the way AIDS was defined in a moment when no one else thought that definition needed to be changed. I argue that philosopher Sue Campbell's work on the importance of understanding memory and feeling as relational helps understand the histories of death and loss, resistance and fierce joy, crystallized in activist ...
Artists have lent their voices to many activist initiatives, and the AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 19...
Scholarship on HIV/AIDS in the United States and Canada has foregrounded the importance of direct-ac...
The onset and diagnosis of AIDS dementia marks a new dimension to living with HIV, an aspect few ima...
This paper explores the history of women activists in ACT/UP and affiliated organizations responding...
Advances in antiretroviral treatments mean that people are living longer with HIV and that the spect...
This dissertation examines the U.S. AIDS crisis from 1981 to 1993 to understand how women came to be...
Examining the dynamics and activities of the AIDS activist movement--here, through an analysis base...
For women in the United States, the fight against AIDS has for the past forty years been a fight for...
The AIDS epidemic in 1980s and 1990s America can—and must—be read not simply as an epidemic of disea...
Social movement organizations, such as AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP), have had an impact ...
The human immunodeficiency virus or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) epidemic began in...
When AIDS was first recognized in 1981, most experts believed that it was a plague, a virulent unexp...
Nostalgia has long been dismissed and derided by scholars and popular commentators as a pointless an...
This paper will provide a comprehensive analysis of the social movement headed by the group AIDS Coa...
Little attention has been paid to illness meanings held by those with HIV in the presence of highly ...
Artists have lent their voices to many activist initiatives, and the AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 19...
Scholarship on HIV/AIDS in the United States and Canada has foregrounded the importance of direct-ac...
The onset and diagnosis of AIDS dementia marks a new dimension to living with HIV, an aspect few ima...
This paper explores the history of women activists in ACT/UP and affiliated organizations responding...
Advances in antiretroviral treatments mean that people are living longer with HIV and that the spect...
This dissertation examines the U.S. AIDS crisis from 1981 to 1993 to understand how women came to be...
Examining the dynamics and activities of the AIDS activist movement--here, through an analysis base...
For women in the United States, the fight against AIDS has for the past forty years been a fight for...
The AIDS epidemic in 1980s and 1990s America can—and must—be read not simply as an epidemic of disea...
Social movement organizations, such as AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACT UP), have had an impact ...
The human immunodeficiency virus or acquired immune deficiency syndrome (HIV/AIDS) epidemic began in...
When AIDS was first recognized in 1981, most experts believed that it was a plague, a virulent unexp...
Nostalgia has long been dismissed and derided by scholars and popular commentators as a pointless an...
This paper will provide a comprehensive analysis of the social movement headed by the group AIDS Coa...
Little attention has been paid to illness meanings held by those with HIV in the presence of highly ...
Artists have lent their voices to many activist initiatives, and the AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 19...
Scholarship on HIV/AIDS in the United States and Canada has foregrounded the importance of direct-ac...
The onset and diagnosis of AIDS dementia marks a new dimension to living with HIV, an aspect few ima...