a Social Anthropology Department, York University , Toronto , Ontario , Canada.
b Community, Culture and Global Studies Department, University of British Columbia , Okanagan , Kelowna , British Columbia, Canada.
Med Anthropol. 2019 May-Jun;38(4):311-326. doi: 10.1080/01459740.2018.1551390. Epub 2019 Jan 11.
Drawing upon ethnographic research in Winnipeg, Manitoba, we complicate simplistic epidemiological and sexual health discourses that position African newcomer teen girls and young women as "at-risk" for HIV/AIDS and other consequences of being sexually active. By tracing the trajectories of sexual health messages and utilizing the concept of assemblage, we seek to account for the ways in which risk is actively made and negotiated in practice by African newcomer youth. By highlighting the perspectives and experiences of participants in relationship to Canadian literature on the subject of sexual risk, culture, and education, we work to counter essentializing, racializing, and pathologizing discourses.
利用在马尼托巴省温尼伯市进行的民族志研究,我们对简单化的流行病学和性健康论述进行了复杂的分析,这些论述将非洲新移民少女和年轻女性定位为感染艾滋病毒/艾滋病和其他性活跃后果的“高危人群”。通过追踪性健康信息的轨迹,并利用组合的概念,我们试图说明非洲新移民青年在实践中如何积极地制造和协商风险。通过强调参与者与加拿大关于性风险、文化和教育主题的文献相关的观点和经验,我们努力反对本质主义、种族主义和病耻化的论述。