Singer M
Hispanic Health Council, Hartford, CT 06106.
Soc Sci Med. 1994 Oct;39(7):931-48. doi: 10.1016/0277-9536(94)90205-4.
The social identity of HIV/AIDS in the U.S. has been shaped, for the most part, by two factors, the prevailing configuration of social relations across class, racial, gender, and sexual orientation, on the one hand, and the prevailing array of public health, especially epidemiological, categories of disease transmission, on the other. Focusing on the AIDS epidemic among inner city people of color, this paper challenges the distortions wrought in our understanding from both of these factors and instead develops an alternative perspective for AIDS research among medical anthropologists and health social scientists generally.
在美国,艾滋病毒/艾滋病的社会身份在很大程度上由两个因素塑造而成,一方面是阶级、种族、性别和性取向方面社会关系的普遍结构,另一方面是公共卫生领域,尤其是疾病传播的流行病学分类的普遍情况。本文聚焦于市中心有色人种中的艾滋病疫情,对这两个因素给我们的认知造成的扭曲提出质疑,转而在医学人类学家和健康社会科学家群体中为艾滋病研究开拓一种不同的视角。