HIV/AIDS in Memory, Culture and Society (Palgrave Studies in Science and Popular Culture)

HIV/AIDS in Memory, Culture and Society (Palgrave Studies in Science and Popular Culture)

by: Alicia Castillo Villanueva (Editor),Angelos Bollas (Editor)

Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan

Edition: 2024th

Publication Date: 2024/7/9

Language: English

Print Length: 179 pages

ISBN-10: 3031596986

ISBN-13: 9783031596988

Book Description

This volume examines the role of culture in developing social, cultural and political discourses of HIV/AIDS from a contemporary viewpoint. In doing so, the memory of HIV/AIDS is a powerful tool to examine representations of the past and connect them with future debates. This reassessment of HIV/AIDS explores the most appropriate way to come to terms with a past that involved a negative, stigmatised and marginalised representation. Therefore, remembering plays a key role in generating collective memory, which allows for the exchange of mnemonic content between individual minds, creates discourses on memory and commemoration, and disseminates versions of the past that may affect the representation of HIV/AIDS in the future. Indeed, rewriting about the past also means assessing our responsibility towards the present and the potential of transmission to future generations, especially in times of pandemics.

About the Author

This volume examines the role of culture in developing social, cultural and political discourses of HIV/AIDS from a contemporary viewpoint. In doing so, the memory of HIV/AIDS is a powerful tool to examine representations of the past and connect them with future debates. This reassessment of HIV/AIDS explores the most appropriate way to come to terms with a past that involved a negative, stigmatised and marginalised representation. Therefore, remembering plays a key role in generating collective memory, which allows for the exchange of mnemonic content between individual minds, creates discourses on memory and commemoration, and disseminates versions of the past that may affect the representation of HIV/AIDS in the future. Indeed, rewriting about the past also means assessing our responsibility towards the present and the potential of transmission to future generations, especially in times of pandemics.

获取PDF电子书代发服务10立即求助
1111

未经允许不得转载:Wow! eBook » HIV/AIDS in Memory, Culture and Society (Palgrave Studies in Science and Popular Culture)

评论