Department of Communication Studies, Visual and Digital Cultures Research Center (ViDi), University of Antwerp, Belgium.
Anthropol Med. 2022 Jun;29(2):175-192. doi: 10.1080/13648470.2021.1893981. Epub 2021 Jul 21.
This paper analyses the lived experiences of people living with HIV in South Africa through the use of body mapping as a visual research method, by focusing on the physical and symbolic use of the body within the broader context of anthropology and medical anthropology. The study consists of an empirical analysis of the body maps themselves and the accompanied narratives of seven participants, six female and one male participant living with HIV in South Africa. Drawing upon theories and literature on theorising the body in medical anthropology and visual research, this study explores the significance of this practice as a visual research method in understanding the nuanced lived experiences of people living with HIV by highlighting the individuality of the body and emotions; embodied experiences: a bio-cultural approach; and the body politic: social injustice. The results of this study illustrate that body mapping is a unique visual research method, that explores the body as the vehicle in which we exist within the world, while containing a vast amount of layered interpretive and cultural meanings, which are key to understanding the lived experience of people from marginalised groups.
本文通过使用身体绘图作为视觉研究方法,分析了南非艾滋病毒感染者的生活体验,重点关注身体在人类学和医学人类学更广泛背景下的物理和象征用途。该研究包括对七名参与者(六名女性和一名男性)的身体绘图本身以及伴随的叙述进行实证分析,这些参与者在南非感染了艾滋病毒。本研究借鉴了医学人类学和视觉研究中关于身体理论化的理论和文献,探讨了这种实践作为视觉研究方法的重要性,通过突出身体和情感的个体性;体现经验:一种生物文化方法;以及政治身体:社会不公正,来理解艾滋病毒感染者的细微生活体验。本研究的结果表明,身体绘图是一种独特的视觉研究方法,它探索了身体作为我们在世界上存在的载体,同时包含了大量分层的解释和文化意义,这些意义是理解边缘化群体的人生活体验的关键。