The Republic of Therapy – Triage and Sovereignty in West Africa′s Time of AIDS: Body, Commodity, Text
Autor Vinh–kim Nguyenen Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 oct 2010
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822348740
ISBN-10: 0822348748
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 2 tables
Dimensiuni: 161 x 233 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Seria Body, Commodity, Text
ISBN-10: 0822348748
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 2 tables
Dimensiuni: 161 x 233 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Seria Body, Commodity, Text
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsIntroduction: Côte-dIvoire and Triage in the Time of AIDS; 1. Testimonials That Bind: Organizing Communities with HIV; 2. Confessional Technologies: Conjuring the Self; 3. Soldiers of God: Together and Apart; 4. Life Itself: Triage and Therapeutic Citizenship ; 5. Biopower: Fevers, Tribes, and Bulldozers; 6. The Crisis: Economies, Warriors, and the Erosion of Sovereignty; 7. Uses and Pleasures: The Republic Inside Out; Conclusion: Who Lives? Who Dies?Notes; References; Index
Recenzii
In Republic of Therapy, the experts range from the international AIDS industry to Ivorian healers, activists, and friends of the author. Nguyen, a medical doctor and anthropologist, writes from his work as a community organizer among HIV-positive groups in West Africa, as an AIDS physician in an Abidjan clinic, and as an ethnographer in the citys subcultures.... The book is important for understanding how technologies of the self used by people in local organizations resemble both colonial patterns of interaction and international AIDS organizations confessional theatre. AIDS treatment technologies make for a particular kind of politics. - Lisa Ann Richey, African Affairs
A tour de force. A Republic of Therapy is a shrewdly theorized ethnography of AIDS practices, technologies, drugs, confessions, and individuals in West Africa. Tracing how triage, confession, and activism emerged from 1995 in Abidjan, site of one of the very first HIV treatment programs in Africa, Vinh-Kim Nguyen analyses the workings and unintended consequences of a new politics of biomedical survival. Scrupulously un-romanticized, the book reveals francophone West Africans competing to stay alive in the time of AIDS, while actively linking their selves and bodies to practices of triage and confession. This sharp, urgent, and intellectually daring book brings uncommon critical insight to the violence of humanistic global health interventions and the searing paradoxes of triage.--Nancy Rose Hunt, author of A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo
The activist, physician, and anthropologist Vinh-Kim Nguyen has written an engaged, rigorous, and compelling account of the years when, in West Africa, AIDS treatment started to become available and persons living with HIV began to organize. With insight and sympathy, he explores how new political forms were thus invented in Côte dIvoire and Burkina Faso, combining therapeutic sovereignty and health democracy, triage of patients and empowerment of communities, confessions and accusations.--Didier Fassin, author of When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa
"In Republic of Therapy, the experts range from the international AIDS industry to Ivorian healers, activists, and friends of the author. Nguyen, a medical doctor and anthropologist, writes from his work as a community organizer among HIV-positive groups in West Africa, as an AIDS physician in an Abidjan clinic, and as an ethnographer in the city's subcultures... The book is important for understanding how 'technologies of the self' used by people in local organizations resemble both colonial patterns of interaction and international AIDS organizations' confessional theatre. AIDS treatment technologies make for a particular kind of politics." - Lisa Ann Richey, African Affairs "A tour de force. A Republic of Therapy is a shrewdly theorized ethnography of AIDS practices, technologies, drugs, confessions, and individuals in West Africa. Tracing how triage, confession, and activism emerged from 1995 in Abidjan, site of one of the very first HIV treatment programs in Africa, Vinh-Kim Nguyen analyses the workings and unintended consequences of a new politics of biomedical survival. Scrupulously un-romanticized, the book reveals francophone West Africans competing to stay alive in the time of AIDS, while actively linking their selves and bodies to practices of triage and confession. This sharp, urgent, and intellectually daring book brings uncommon critical insight to the violence of humanistic global health interventions and the searing paradoxes of triage."--Nancy Rose Hunt, author of A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo "The activist, physician, and anthropologist Vinh-Kim Nguyen has written an engaged, rigorous, and compelling account of the years when, in West Africa, AIDS treatment started to become available and persons living with HIV began to organize. With insight and sympathy, he explores how new political forms were thus invented in Cote d'Ivoire and Burkina Faso, combining therapeutic sovereignty and health democracy, triage of patients and empowerment of communities, confessions and accusations."--Didier Fassin, author of When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa
A tour de force. A Republic of Therapy is a shrewdly theorized ethnography of AIDS practices, technologies, drugs, confessions, and individuals in West Africa. Tracing how triage, confession, and activism emerged from 1995 in Abidjan, site of one of the very first HIV treatment programs in Africa, Vinh-Kim Nguyen analyses the workings and unintended consequences of a new politics of biomedical survival. Scrupulously un-romanticized, the book reveals francophone West Africans competing to stay alive in the time of AIDS, while actively linking their selves and bodies to practices of triage and confession. This sharp, urgent, and intellectually daring book brings uncommon critical insight to the violence of humanistic global health interventions and the searing paradoxes of triage.--Nancy Rose Hunt, author of A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo
The activist, physician, and anthropologist Vinh-Kim Nguyen has written an engaged, rigorous, and compelling account of the years when, in West Africa, AIDS treatment started to become available and persons living with HIV began to organize. With insight and sympathy, he explores how new political forms were thus invented in Côte dIvoire and Burkina Faso, combining therapeutic sovereignty and health democracy, triage of patients and empowerment of communities, confessions and accusations.--Didier Fassin, author of When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa
"In Republic of Therapy, the experts range from the international AIDS industry to Ivorian healers, activists, and friends of the author. Nguyen, a medical doctor and anthropologist, writes from his work as a community organizer among HIV-positive groups in West Africa, as an AIDS physician in an Abidjan clinic, and as an ethnographer in the city's subcultures... The book is important for understanding how 'technologies of the self' used by people in local organizations resemble both colonial patterns of interaction and international AIDS organizations' confessional theatre. AIDS treatment technologies make for a particular kind of politics." - Lisa Ann Richey, African Affairs "A tour de force. A Republic of Therapy is a shrewdly theorized ethnography of AIDS practices, technologies, drugs, confessions, and individuals in West Africa. Tracing how triage, confession, and activism emerged from 1995 in Abidjan, site of one of the very first HIV treatment programs in Africa, Vinh-Kim Nguyen analyses the workings and unintended consequences of a new politics of biomedical survival. Scrupulously un-romanticized, the book reveals francophone West Africans competing to stay alive in the time of AIDS, while actively linking their selves and bodies to practices of triage and confession. This sharp, urgent, and intellectually daring book brings uncommon critical insight to the violence of humanistic global health interventions and the searing paradoxes of triage."--Nancy Rose Hunt, author of A Colonial Lexicon: Of Birth Ritual, Medicalization, and Mobility in the Congo "The activist, physician, and anthropologist Vinh-Kim Nguyen has written an engaged, rigorous, and compelling account of the years when, in West Africa, AIDS treatment started to become available and persons living with HIV began to organize. With insight and sympathy, he explores how new political forms were thus invented in Cote d'Ivoire and Burkina Faso, combining therapeutic sovereignty and health democracy, triage of patients and empowerment of communities, confessions and accusations."--Didier Fassin, author of When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa
Notă biografică
Textul de pe ultima copertă
"The activist, physician, and anthropologist Vinh-Kim Nguyen has written an engaged, rigorous, and compelling account of the years when, in West Africa, AIDS treatment started to become available and persons living with HIV began to organize. With insight and sympathy, he explores how new political forms were thus invented in Cote d'Ivoire and Burkina Faso, combining therapeutic sovereignty and health democracy, triage of patients and empowerment of communities, confessions and accusations."--Didier Fassin, author of "When Bodies Remember: Experiences and Politics of AIDS in South Africa"
Descriere
Ethnography that examines the global civil rights movement demanding access to HIV treatments as it has developed in West Africa