04188nam 22004333 450 991087218700332120240808140912.09783031596995(electronic bk.)9783031596988(MiAaPQ)EBC31522068(Au-PeEL)EBL31522068(CKB)32704655100041(EXLCZ)993270465510004120240711d2024 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHIV/AIDS in Memory, Culture and Society1st ed.Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,2024.©2024.1 online resource (176 pages)Palgrave Studies in Science and Popular Culture SeriesPrint version: Castillo Villanueva, Alicia HIV/AIDS in Memory, Culture and Society Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2024 9783031596988 Intro -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- List of Figures -- Chapter 1: Viral Echoes: Revisiting the Cultural Memory of HIV/AIDS -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 The Memory of HIV/AIDS -- 1.3 The Cultural Memory of HIV/AIDS -- References -- Chapter 2: Beyond the Spectacle: Rethinking Media Representations of HIV/AIDS and Social Suffering -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Suffering and Representation -- 2.3 Instances of Representation and Silencing of Social Suffering -- 2.4 Identifying with/the Other -- 2.5 Effects of the Mediation of Social Suffering -- 2.6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 3: #BeMoreJill and the Limited Visibility of Female Carers in It's a Sin -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Caregiving for People with HIV/AIDS -- 3.3 Knowing Jill Baxter -- 3.4 Female Caregiving and 'Doing Gender' in It's a Sin -- 3.5 Those Left Behind: It's a Sin and Visibility on Popular Television -- 3.6 The Affordances of Social Media Hashtags and #BeMoreJill -- 3.7 Conclusion -- References -- List of Television Programs -- Chapter 4: Incorrigibility and Becoming-Child: Portrayals of People Living with HIV/AIDS in the Works of Cuban Writer Miguel Angel Fraga -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 The Cuban Sidatorios and 'Sanatorium Identities' -- 4.3 "Individuals to Be Corrected": Subjectivation and Self-Assertion in Fraga's Work -- 4.4 Incorrigibility and Becoming-Child: Modes of Resistance Against Power -- References -- Chapter 5: Remembering 'Risky' Sex: Viral Hauntology and Post-crisis Cruising Discourses -- 5.1 Remembering 'Risky' Sex: Viral Hauntology and Post-crisis Cruising Discourses -- 5.2 Panic in the Alien Sex Club -- 5.3 Who Does Memory Serve? -- 5.4 Nostalgia and Beyond Shame -- 5.5 Deidealisation and Petite Mort -- References -- Chapter 6: Embodied Topologies: Space and the Place of Memory Among Women Living with HIV in South Africa.6.1 Remembering the Past and Securing the Future -- 6.2 Space and the Place of Memory -- 6.3 Methods -- 6.4 Memory, Topologies and Embodiment -- 6.5 Starting Life: Remembering the Romance and Risk of the Eastern Cape -- 6.6 Marking Life: Memory and the Socio-spatial Generation of Gender -- 6.7 Sustaining Life: The Memory of Illness in the 'Brown Map' of Skin -- 6.8 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 7: Mothering with HIV -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Issues for Mothers Living with HIV -- 7.3 Women and HIV in Ireland: The Early Years -- 7.4 Research of Women and Mothers Living with HIV -- 7.5 Mothering When HIV Positive -- 7.6 Gaining an Understanding of MLHIV Experiences -- 7.7 Becoming an MLHIV -- 7.8 Vertical Transmission Worries -- 7.9 Disclosure: A Challenge for MLHIV -- 7.10 The Benefits of Being a Mother Living with HIV -- 7.11 Conclusion -- References -- Index.Palgrave Studies in Science and Popular Culture Series362.1969792900Castillo Villanueva Alicia1744539Bollas Angelos1737613MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910872187003321HIV4174510UNINA