Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-rcrh6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T13:44:33.406Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

AIDS as a moral metaphor: An analysis of the politics of the ‘Third Epidemic’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Get access

Extract

This paper examines some of the moral meanings of aids, and argues that in addition to understanding aids in the context of the sexual counter-revolution, it also needs to be placed in the wider context of global economic and ideological crises, and the ‘New Right's’ struggle for hegemony. Denis Altman refers to aids as ‘the most political of diseases’ (Altman 1986, p. 11). A few years ago, Evans Stark pointed out that all epidemics are ‘social events’, even though they may appear as natural, random phenomena. This is because they have become the focus of struggles for control over resources (principally housing, medicines, and sanitation) (Stark 1977). Epidemics further tend to throw into relief deeply held social tensions and anxieties, which can become triggers for social reorganisation around traditional values. It is not difficult to see how this is the case with aids, which is infused in particular with tensions over sexuality and desire. In relation to this it is important to emphasize first, that sexual contact is estimated to be responsible for around two-thirds of reported aids cases amongst adults in the U.S.A. (Gracie et al. 1986), but it is not actually an exclusively sexually transmitted disease; and secondly that compared with other major causes of morbidity and mortality, aids remains a relatively rare condition in many parts of the world. It is sociologically significant though, that the two major routes of transmission, IV use and penetrative sexual intercourse, involve issues of control over body boundaries.

Type
Sentiments moraux, effets sociaux
Copyright
Copyright © Archives Européenes de Sociology 1989

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Altman, D., aids and the New Puritanism (London, Pluto Press, 1986).Google Scholar
Barker, C. & Turschen, M., aids in Africa, Review of African Political Economy, XXXVI (1986), 5154.Google Scholar
Baylies, C., The meaning of health in Africa, Review of African Political Economy, XXXVI (1986) 6272.Google Scholar
Bennett, R. J. (1987), aids as a social phenomenon, Social Science and Medicine, XXV, 6, 529–540.Google Scholar
Biggar, R. J., et al. , Regional variation in prevalence of antibody against human T-lymphotrophic virus types I and III in Kenya, East Africa, International Journal of Cancer, XXV (1985), 763767.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biggar, R. J., The aids problem in Africa, The Lancet, 01 11, 1986, 7982.Google Scholar
Braidwood, P., aids—why we should test, The Observer, 19th 07, 1987.Google Scholar
Buchholtz, M. B. & Reich, G., Panik, Panikbedarf, Panikverarbeitung. Sozio-psychoanalytische Anmerkunen zu zeitgenossischen Desintegrationsprozessen aus Anlass von Tschernobyl und aids, Psyche, XLI (1987), 610640.Google Scholar
Carothers, J. C., The Psychology of Mau Mau (Nairobi, The Government Printer, 1954).Google Scholar
Collier, C., The 20th Century Plague (London, Lion, 1987).Google Scholar
Chirimuuta, R. C. & Chirimuuta, R. J., aids, Africa and Racism (Bretby, Chirimuuta, 1987).Google Scholar
Crawford, R., A cultural account of ‘health’: control, release and the social body' in McKinlay, J. (ed.). Issues in the Political Economy of Health Care (London, Tavistock, 1984), 60106.Google Scholar
Davis, R., Passage Through Crisis: polio victims and their families (Indianapolis, Bobbs-Merrill, 1963).Google Scholar
Doyal, L., The Political Economy of Health (London, Pluto, 1979).Google Scholar
Fay, B., Critical Social Science. Liberation and its limits (Ithica, Cornell University Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Feldman, D. A., Public awareness of aids in Rwanda, Social Science and Medicine, XXIV (1987) 2, 97–100.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, M. & Milligan, D., The Truth about the aids Panic (New York, Junius Press, 1987).Google Scholar
Fortin, A. J., The politics of aids in Kenya, Third World Quarterly, IX (1987) 3, 906–919.Google Scholar
Hancock, G. & Carim, E., aids. The Deadly Epidemic (Littlehampton, U. K., Gollanz, 1986).Google Scholar
Herzlich, C. & Pierret, J., The Construction of aids in the French Press,Xth International Conference on Social Science and Medicine, Sitges,Spain,1987.Google Scholar
Hull, F. M., The role of socio-behavioural scientists in health care practice, Social Science and Medicine, XXV (1987) 6, 679–687.Google Scholar
Kreiss, J. K. et al. , aids virus infection in Nairobi prostitutes, New England Journal of Medicine, CCCXIV (1986) 7, 414–8.Google Scholar
McKie, R., Panic. The story of aids (Willesborough, Thorsons, 1986).Google Scholar
Murtagh, P., aids in Africa, The Guardian, 3rd–5th 02, 1987.Google Scholar
New Internationalist, The politics of aids. A guide to sexual survival, 03, 1987.Google Scholar
Panos Institute, aids and the Third World (London, New Society Publishers, 1988).Google Scholar
Patton, C., Sex and Germs. The politics of aids. (Boston, South end Press, 1985).Google Scholar
Piot, P. et al. , Acquired immunodeficiency syndrome in a heterosexual population in Zaire, The Lancet, 07 14th, 1984.Google Scholar
Sontag, S., Illness as Metaphor (New York, Farrar, 1978).Google Scholar
Sontag, S., aids and its metaphors, New York Review of Books, 27 10, 1988.Google Scholar
Sontag, S., aids and its Metaphors (London, Allen Lane, 1989).Google Scholar
Stark, E. (1977), The Epidemic as a social event, International Journal of the Health Services (1977), 681705.Google Scholar
Sterling, T., Does smoking kill workers or Working kill smokers?, International Journal of the Health Services (1978), 437454.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taussig, M., Reification and the consciousness of the patient, Social Science and Medicine (1980), 14B: 313.Google Scholar
Veitch, A., Black magic behind aids, The Guardian, 26th 06, 1987.Google Scholar
Velimirovic, B., aids as a social phenomenon, Social Science and Medicine, XXV (1987) 6, 541–552.Google Scholar
Watney, S., Policing Desire. Pornography, aids and the Media (London, Methuen, 1987 a).Google Scholar
Watney, S., The wrong ideas that are plaguing aids, The Guardian, 16th 10, 1987 b).Google Scholar
Weekly Review, aids. Battling the Scourge [Nairobi] 16th 01, 1987.Google Scholar
Weeks, J., Sexuality and its Discontents (London, rkp, 1985).Google Scholar
Weeks, J. Love in a cold climate, Marxism Today, 01, 1987.Google Scholar
Wellings, K., Perceptions of risk.Media treatment of aids, Paper for the Xth International Conference on Social Sciences and Medicine, Sitges,Spain,October, 1987.Google Scholar
Wendler, I. et al. , Seroepidemiology of human immunodeficiency virus in Africa, British Medical Journal, 09 27th, 1986, 782785.Google Scholar
Who, World Health Statistics (Geneva 1987).Google Scholar
Zola, I., Medicine as an institution of social control, Sociological Review, XX (1972), 487504.CrossRefGoogle Scholar