1st Edition

Viral Times Reflections on the COVID-19 and HIV Pandemics

    256 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book explores the relationship between COVID-19 and AIDS. It considers both how the earlier HIV pandemic informed our engagement with COVID-19, as well as the ways in which COVID-19 has changed how we remember and experience AIDS.

    Individual sections focus on sexual and intimate relationships, inequalities and injustice, the progressive biomedicalisation of the response (in the absence of a vaccine or effective treatment or cure), and professional, practitioner and community perspectives on the pandemics. The authors come from a wide variety of backgrounds – including public health, nursing, law and legal studies, political studies, and the humanities and social sciences. The book contains contributions by established writers such as Dennis Altman, Shalini Bharat, Tim Dean, Deborah Lupton, Shubhada Maitra, Pauline Oosterhoff and Michael Tan, as well as chapters by Chris Ashford and Gareth Longstaff, Bernard Kelly, Dean Murphy and Kiran Pienaar, and Theodore (ted) Kerr.

    This thought-provoking and timely volume includes case studies from Australia, Austria, Brazil, Canada, Germany, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, the UK, the USA and Vietnam. It has been written for students and scholars from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds, including sociology, healthcare, public health, social work, anthropology, and gender and sexuality studies. The book will also be of interest to the general reader who wants a better understanding of the social and cultural dimensions of modern-day pandemics and the personal and community responses to which they give rise.

    1. Viral times: HIV, COVID-19 and beyond

    Jaime García-Iglesias, Maurice Nagington and Peter Aggleton

     

     

    Part I Intimate relationships

     

    2. Navigating dating and sexual intimacy in viral times: How people adapt their sexual relationships to pandemic risk

    Barbara Rothmüller and Anna-Greta Mittelberger

     

    3. 75 loads in LA: Situating the 'queer mundane' in viral times

    Chris Ashford and Gareth Longstaff

     

    4. Narratives of pandemic lives: Everyday experiences of the plague, HIV and COVID-19 in literary fiction

    Deborah Lupton

     

    5. The politics of epidemics: From the local to the global

    Dennis Altman

     

    6. An unlimited intimacy of the air: Pandemic fantasy, COVID-19 and the biopolitics of respiration

    Tim Dean

     

     

    Part II Biomedicalisation

               

    7. How to survive another plague: Autoethnographic reflections on antiviral medication, cultural memory and dystopian metaphor

    Max Morris

     

    8. Thinking with HIV in pandemic times: A diffractive reading of COVID-19 and mpox

    Kiran Pienaar and Dean Murphy

     

    9. People, politics and death: International, national and community responses to HIV and COVID-19

    Richard Parker and Peter Aggleton

     

    10. Viral times and governance: The Philippines

    Michael Lim Tan

     

     

    Part III Professional, practitioner, and community perspectives

     

    11. When The Clapping stops: Mourning and the spectacle of public sacrifice during COVID-19

    Bernard Kelly

     

    12. Memorialisation within an ongoing crisis: Learning from COVID-19, HIV and AIDS, and the Overdose Response Activists

    Theodore (ted) Kerr

     

    13. Critical hope and responses to pandemics: From HIV to COVID-19

    Carmen H. Logie and Frannie MacKenzie

     

    14. HIV outreach for men who have sex with men during the COVID-19 pandemic in Indonesia, 2020–2021

    Benjamin Hegarty et al.

     

    15. Equitable access and public attitudes to prevention of HIV and COVID-19 in Vietnam

    Pauline Oosterhoff and Tu Anh Hoang

     

    16. COVID-19 stigma and discrimination in India: Parallels with the HIV pandemic

    Shubhada Maitra, Shalini Bharat and Marie A. Brault

    Biography

    Jaime García-Iglesias is a Chancellor’s Fellow in the Usher Institute at the University of Edinburgh, UK.

    Maurice Nagington is a lecturer, researcher and registered nurse at the University of Manchester, UK.

    Peter Aggleton holds senior professorial positions at The Australian National University, UNSW Sydney, and UCL. He is an adjunct professor in the Australian Research Centre for Sex, Health and Society at La Trobe University in Melbourne.