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“Battlefields of Opposition” – Constructing HIV/AIDS Diversity Literacy Week 6 / Lecture 1 Prepared by Claire Kelly.

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Presentation on theme: "“Battlefields of Opposition” – Constructing HIV/AIDS Diversity Literacy Week 6 / Lecture 1 Prepared by Claire Kelly."— Presentation transcript:

1 “Battlefields of Opposition” – Constructing HIV/AIDS Diversity Literacy Week 6 / Lecture 1 Prepared by Claire Kelly

2 Competing constructions of HIV/AIDS in SA (Posel)  “ symbolic politics of the new South Africa” (p. 18)  “metaphorical significance” (p.18)  “far more than a matter of public health, having wide ranging political and symbolic repercussions that cut to the very meaning of South Africa’s ‘liberation’…” (p. 18)  “the stakes were far higher than the nation’s physical health: it’s ethical well being, and the integrity of it’s social and political body, were similarly at risk” (p. 22)  “political struggles over the very nature of AIDS ” (p.14) Prepared by Claire Kelly

3 Construction of HIV/Aids in SA  Insert: pictures from Zapiro, South Africa’s leading cartoonist who’s images capture the public discourse on HIV/Aids in South Africa  http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/123054-040215st http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/123054-040215st  http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/134492- 050928indep http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/134492- 050928indep  http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/122965-090521tt http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/122965-090521tt  http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/134579-050508st http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/134579-050508st  http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/123097-010405mg http://www.zapiro.com/cartoon/123097-010405mg Prepared by Claire Kelly

4 Competing constructions of HIV/AIDS in SA (Posel)  “ scientific orthodox ” (TAC, UN)  HI virus causes AIDS  HI virus spread mostly through heterosexual sex in Africa  Treatment of with ARV’s & education programmes to change sex behaviours  “ dissident ” (Mbeki)  Scientific orthodox as expression of West’s scientific imperialism > pathologisation & sexualisation of black African bodies  “…displaced sex from the foreground of the discussion” (p. 23)  “The problem became centrally a matter of Africa’s ‘level of development’, rather than a racial, cultural or moral one… rather than any judgment on African ‘values’, ‘ways of life’, or personhood that might reiterate racist stereotypes of the black African. ” (p. 23) Prepared by Claire Kelly

5 “Battlefield of oppositions” (Njambi, 2004, p. 283) “ Scientific orthodox ”“ Dissident ” ScienceSuperstition Medical knowledgeTradition Normal sexualityAbnormal sexuality CivilizedBarbaric ModernityBackwardness ExpertNon-expert EducatedIgnorant “to enter the[ HIV/AIDS] discourse is to immediately be drawn into a battlefield filled with conceptual oppositions already in place” (paraphrasing Njambi, 2004, p. 283) “ epidemic of significations ” (Posel, p. 18, citing Treichler, 1999, p.1) Prepared by Claire Kelly

6 Competing “scientific” discourses (Patton)  Immunology  AIDS  “social & environmental causes”  Enhanced ability to cope with opportunistic infection  Virology  HIV  “sexually transmittable pathogen”  Halt progression on the virus  “…why particular forms of scientific enquiry gain control of the metaphors that provide larger cultural explanations of a range of phenomena metaphorized onto the body” (p. 59) Prepared by Claire Kelly

7 “Behaviourist-orientated traditional model” (Patton, p.71)  Ignorance or attitudinal or group deficiency  Unhealthy individual behaviour  Behaviour change “Hard to reach” = “failure of moral and conceptual skills” “ Experts ” (pure science) Population (popular understanding) Information & counselling Prepared by Claire Kelly

8 “Behaviourist-orientated traditional model” (Patton, p.71)  “masks way medical research reconstructs neocolonial relationships ”  “obscures ways in which pressure to adopt organisational schema of science as representative of lived experience reinscribes hierarchies of social difference ”  “reads as progress the destruction of vernaculars and the adoption of scientific language” e.g. “slim disease”  “ Dismissive of indigenous ways of knowing ” (Chilisa, p. 659) Prepared by Claire Kelly

9 Disciplinary power “modern form of power which for Foucault, is productive rather than repressive, in the sense of ‘bringing things into being’, producing both knowledge (i.e. the discipline of [psychology], as a way of knowing the world), and subjective effects (e.g. individuality, the soul, personal psychology etc.)”(Hook, 2004, p. 213) “ Disciplinary power is related to techniques, procedures and assessments that measure, monitor, and treat subjects as to normalise deviant ones further ” (Hook, 2004, p. 213) Prepared by Claire Kelly

10 Extra references  Wairim~u Ngaruiya Njambi (2004) Dualisms and female bodies in representations of African female circumcision: A feminist critique. Feminist Theory 5 (3), p. 281 – 303  Hook, D. (2004) Foucault, disciplinary power and the critical pre-history of psychology. In D. Hook, P.Kiguwa, N. Mkhize & A. Collins (Eds) Critical psychology. Cape Town: UCT Press


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