Logie Carmen H, Kinitz David J, Gittings Lesley, Persad Yasmeen, Lacombe-Duncan Ashley, Poteat Tonia
Factor-Inwentash Faculty of Social Work, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1V4, Canada.
Women's College Research Institute, Women's College Hospital, Toronto, ON M5G 1N8, Canada.
Health Promot Int. 2022 Jun 23;37(Supplement_2):ii37-ii47. doi: 10.1093/heapro/daac017.
Critical hope centres optimism and possibilities for change in the midst of struggles for social justice. It was a central tenet of early participatory pedagogy and HIV research. However, critical hope has been overlooked in contemporary HIV research that largely focuses on risk and biomedical interventions in ways that obscure collective agency and community strengths. We conducted a community-based study with transgender (trans) women of colour in Toronto, Canada to adapt an evidence-based HIV prevention intervention. Participants resisted a focus on HIV, instead calling researchers to centre journeys to self-love in contexts of social exclusion. In response, we piloted three arts-based, participatory methods generated with community collaborators: (i) affirmation cards sharing supportive messages with other trans women, (ii) hand-held mirrors for reflecting and sharing messages of self-acceptance and (iii) anatomical heart images to visualize coping strategies. Participants generated solidarity and community through shared stories of self-acceptance within contexts of pain, exclusion and loss. Narratives revealed locating agency and self-acceptance through community connectedness. Critical hope was a by-product of this participatory process, whereby participants shared personal and collective optimism. Participatory and arts-based methods that centre self-acceptance and solidarity can nurture resistance to pathologizing discourses in HIV research. Centring critical hope and participant-generated methodologies is a promising approach to transformative health promotion and intervention research. These methodological insights can be engaged in future participatory work with other marginalized groups facing dominant biomedical risk discourses. Critical hope holds potential as a participatory health promotion strategy for envisioning possibilities for sustainable change.
批判性希望在为社会正义而斗争的过程中聚焦于乐观主义和变革的可能性。它是早期参与式教学法和艾滋病研究的核心原则。然而,批判性希望在当代艾滋病研究中被忽视了,当代艾滋病研究主要关注风险和生物医学干预,其方式掩盖了集体能动性和社区优势。我们在加拿大多伦多对有色人种跨性别女性开展了一项基于社区的研究,以调整一种循证艾滋病预防干预措施。参与者抵制对艾滋病的关注,而是呼吁研究人员将自爱之旅置于社会排斥的背景中。作为回应,我们与社区合作者共同试点了三种基于艺术的参与式方法:(i)肯定卡,与其他跨性别女性分享支持性信息;(ii)手持镜子,用于反思和分享自我接纳的信息;(iii)解剖心脏图像,以可视化应对策略。参与者通过在痛苦、排斥和失落的背景下分享自我接纳的故事,产生了团结和社区感。叙事揭示了通过社区联系来定位能动性和自我接纳。批判性希望是这个参与过程的一个副产品,参与者在这个过程中分享了个人和集体的乐观主义。以自我接纳和团结为中心的参与式和基于艺术的方法可以培养对艾滋病研究中病理化话语的抵制。以批判性希望和参与者生成的方法为中心是促进变革性健康和干预研究的一种有前景的方法。这些方法学见解可用于未来与面临主导性生物医学风险话语的其他边缘化群体开展的参与式工作。批判性希望作为一种参与式健康促进策略,具有为可持续变革设想可能性的潜力。