Dunbar Deanne
Graduate Institute of Liberal Arts & Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
J Med Humanit. 2011 Jun;32(2):115-25. doi: 10.1007/s10912-010-9133-1.
Although clarity about HIV transmission biology and effective therapy should mean that an AIDS diagnosis is more socially acceptable today, for some groups the cultural stigma of HIV infection has changed little in the last 30 years. This paper will examine why representations of HIV-positive gay men suggest they pose a special civic risk and how these conceptualizations have harnessed cultural anxieties about racial and sexual minorities to shape public policy and behavior since the advent of Highly Active Antiretroviral Therapy (HAART) in 1996.
尽管对艾滋病毒传播生物学的清晰认识和有效的治疗方法意味着如今艾滋病诊断在社会上更容易被接受,但对于一些群体而言,在过去30年里,艾滋病毒感染的文化污名几乎没有改变。本文将探讨为什么对艾滋病毒呈阳性的男同性恋者的描述表明他们构成了特殊的公民风险,以及自1996年高效抗逆转录病毒疗法(HAART)问世以来,这些概念是如何利用对种族和性少数群体的文化焦虑来塑造公共政策和行为的。