Moral Threats and Dangerous Desires

About The Book

Since 1981 AIDS has had an enormous impact upon the popular imagination. Few other diseases this century have been greeted with quite the same fear loathing and prejudice against those who develop it. The mass media and in particular the news media have played a vital part in making sense of AIDS. This volume takes an interdisciplinary perspective combining cultural studies history of medicine and contemporary social theory to examine AIDS reporting. There have been three major themes dominating coverage: the gay-plague dominant in the early 1980s panic-stricken visions of the end of the world as AIDS was said to pose a threat to everyone in the late 1980s; and a growing routinising of coverage in the 1990s. This book lays bare the sub-textual ideologies giving meaning to AIDS news reports including anxieties about pollution and contagion deviance bodily control the moral meanings of risk the valorisation of drugs and medical science. Drawing together the work of cultural and politicaltheorists sociologists and historians who have written about medicine disease and the body as well as that of theorists in Europe and the USA who have focused their attention specificaiiy on AIDS this book explores the wide theoretical debate about the importance of language in the social construction of illness and disease. This text offers insights into the sociocultural context in which attitudes towards people with HIV or AIDS and people's perceptions of risk from HIV infection are developed and the responses of governments to the AIDS epidemic are formulated.
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