ABSTRACT

This book examines the discourse of a "post-AIDS" culture, and the medical-discursive shift from crisis and death to survival and living. Contributions from a diverse group of international scholars interrogate and engage with the cultural, social, political, scientific, historical, global, and local consumptions of the term "post-AIDS" from the perspective of meaning-making on health, illness, and well-being.

The chapters critique and connect meanings of "post-AIDS" to topics such as neoliberalism; race, gender, and advocacy; disclosure; relationships and intimacy; stigma and structural violence; family and community; migration; work; survival; normativity; NGOs, transnational organizations; aging and end-of-life care; the politics of ART and PrEP; mental illness; campaigns; social media; and religion. Using a range of methodological tools, the scholarship herein asks how "post-AIDS" or the "End of the Epidemic" is communicated and made sense of in everyday discourse, what current meanings are circulated and consumed on and around HIV and AIDS, and provides thorough commentary and critique of a "post-AIDS" time.

This book will be an essential read for scholars and students of health communication, sociology of health and illness, medical humanities, political science, and medical anthropology, as well as for policy makers and activists.

chapter |11 pages

Dreaming a Post-AIDS

An Introduction to the Discourse

part I|109 pages

Debate, Discourse, Politics

chapter 1|16 pages

Revisiting “Post-AIDS”

Understanding Gay Community Responses to HIV Then and Now

chapter 3|15 pages

Last People Standing

People Living with HIV after the “End of the Epidemic”

chapter 4|20 pages

A Dramatization of Post-AIDS Stigma

A Pentadic Analysis of the CDC's “Let's Stop HIV Together” Campaign

part II|121 pages

Rhetorics and Relations

chapter 7|23 pages

“I Might as Well Be Dead”

Aging with HIV in the “Post-AIDS” Era

chapter 9|22 pages

“You Fucking Deserve HIV”

Seeking PrEP Information, Disciplinary Power, and Queer Technologies of the Self on /r/AskGayBros

chapter 10|25 pages

Intimacy Uncertainty and Post-AIDS Discourse

HIV and the Role it Plays as an Uninvited Third Party in Serodiscordant Relationships

chapter |5 pages

Afterword

On Localocentricity and “Post-AIDS”