FYI — CF
—–Original Message—–
From: ASA Medical Sociology Section List [mailto:MEDSOC@LISTSERV.NEU.EDU] On Behalf Of Corinne Squire
Sent: Thursday, December 19, 2013 8:10 AM
To: MEDSOC@LISTSERV.NEU.EDU
Subject: ‘Living with HIV and ARVs: Three-letter lives’
Apologies for self-promotion; please repost to anyone who might be interested.
Living with HIV and ARVs: Three-letter lives.
Corinne Squire
Palgrave Macmillan, 2013
256pp, Hardback 9780230284234
About the book: This book gives an account of the new possibilities and difficulties of long-term living with HIV and antiretroviral treatment. It takes an international perspective, looking at commonalities and differences across high and middle-income countries. The book draws on narrative data collected over a long period in the UK and South Africa. Analysing these stories, it argues that the HIV pandemic still presents highly particular issues that we need to address. The book suggests that HIV’s present ‘naturalized’ incorporation into policy and everyday life is incomplete and difficult. It describes the medicalization, normalization and marketization processes that characterize current political, policy and popular approaches to HIV, and argues that these processes often fail or are resisted by people living with HIV. Finally, it describes people living with HIV’s own new narrative strategies for constructing, protecting and extending their HIV citizenship.
Contents: PART I: LIVING WITH HIV IN THE TREATMENT POSSIBILITY ERA 1. Why the Three Letters Matter 2. From HIV’s Exceptionalism to HIV’s Particularity. PART II: BEING NATURALISED, BEING LEFT BEHIND 3. Being Naturalised 4. When the Drugs Do Work: The Medicalised HIV Citizen 5. A Long-Term Condition: HIV’s Normalisation 6. Investing in the Pandemic: the Marketised HIV Citizen 7. Being Left Behind . PART III: ‘LIVING ON’ AND ‘LIVING WITH’ HIV: THE PARTICULARITIES OF EPIDEMICS 8. ‘Living On’: Three-Letter Lives in the UK 9. ‘Living With’ HIV: Three-Letter Lives in South Africa 10. Hopeful Futures, Inertial Histories and the Complex Present.
DISCOUNT OFFERS: £27.50, $47.50. Please go to the Palgrave website, www.palgrave.com, Amazon, or (in Canada) Chapters websites, and use code SQUIRE2013 for US/Canada, WSQUIRE2013a for UK/rest of the world.
***Australasian discount code tba shortly*** DISCOUNT FLIERS: US/Canada: http://www.uel.ac.uk/wwwmedia/schools/lss/stafffiles/csquire/US-Canada-flier-Living-with-HIV-and-ARVs.pdf
UK/rest of the world: http://www.uel.ac.uk/wwwmedia/schools/lss/stafffiles/csquire/UK-flier-Living-with-HIV-and-ARVs.pdf
“Squire’s path-breaking study of the possibilities and difficulties facing people on ART in Europe and Africa consolidates her status as an international leader in academic and policy debates. It poses a stark challenge to the growing swell of glib claims that the problem of HIV/AIDS has been ‘solved’ by the advent of drug treatments.” – Catherine Campbell, Professor of Social Psychology, London School of Economics, UK.
“AIDS and HIV have been around now for over 30 years; we have moved from a time of crisis and fear to a time of the routine and normal. In this challenging study Corinne Squire develops her earlier ground breaking comparative research into HIV in South Africa by updating and contrasting it with interviews in the UK. With clarity, compassion and narrative empathy, she leads us into the fragile worlds of those continuing their daily struggles of living with HIV. Theoretically sophisticated, politically informed and engagingly written, this informative and insightful book is a must read for all those concerned with HIV issues.” – Ken Plummer, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, University of Essex, UK.
“Professor Squire examines the concrete effects of the current ‘optimism’ about ending the AIDS epidemic. Using narrative analysis of persons living with HIV in two communities she has worked within for more than two decades, Squire shows the dissonance between public representation of the ‘naturalness’ of HIV and lived experience of those who live ‘three letter lives’ of increasingly intensified medicalized. As with her earlier works, this is a ‘must read’ for public health officials and critical social scientists involved in the current debates about the value and feasibility of ‘treatment as prevention.'” – Cindy Patton, Professor of Sociology, Simon Fraser University, Canada
Corinne Squire is Professor of Social Sciences and Co-Director, Centre for Narrative Research, University of East London, UK. Her research interests are in HIV and citizenship, subjectivities and culture, and narrative research. Her publications include HIV in South Africa: HIV technologies in international perspective (with Davis) and Doing Narrative Research (with Andrews and Tamboukou).
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