Modernizing Sexuality: U.S. HIV Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa
Moving beyond the boundaries of HIV scholarship, Modernizing Sexuality shows how Western idealizations of normative sexuality and the power of modernity intersect in U.S. HIV prevention policy. In this book, Anne Esacove gathers interview, archival, and ethnographic data from the United States and Malawi to reveal failing U.S. prevention efforts. As seen in the promotion of "love matches" and women's right to "say no" to sex, modernization embedded within U.S. policy actually limits action against this widespread epidemic, and even exacerbates HIV risk among women. Instead, by illuminating the collective solutions and multiple paths of prevention used by Malawians, Esacove's analysis expertly exposes these fundamental flaws and provides direction for potentially more effective strategies. Through this analysis, Modernizing Sexuality not only reveals major U.S. health policy flaws, but asks important questions about prevention narratives, medicalizing social justice advocacy, and feminist and sexuality theories as a guide for HIV prevention policy. Closing with an alternative narrative, Esacove reimagines risk and offers readers innovative prevention strategies to guide future policy endeavors.
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Modernizing Sexuality: U.S. HIV Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa
Moving beyond the boundaries of HIV scholarship, Modernizing Sexuality shows how Western idealizations of normative sexuality and the power of modernity intersect in U.S. HIV prevention policy. In this book, Anne Esacove gathers interview, archival, and ethnographic data from the United States and Malawi to reveal failing U.S. prevention efforts. As seen in the promotion of "love matches" and women's right to "say no" to sex, modernization embedded within U.S. policy actually limits action against this widespread epidemic, and even exacerbates HIV risk among women. Instead, by illuminating the collective solutions and multiple paths of prevention used by Malawians, Esacove's analysis expertly exposes these fundamental flaws and provides direction for potentially more effective strategies. Through this analysis, Modernizing Sexuality not only reveals major U.S. health policy flaws, but asks important questions about prevention narratives, medicalizing social justice advocacy, and feminist and sexuality theories as a guide for HIV prevention policy. Closing with an alternative narrative, Esacove reimagines risk and offers readers innovative prevention strategies to guide future policy endeavors.
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Modernizing Sexuality: U.S. HIV Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa

Modernizing Sexuality: U.S. HIV Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa

by Anne Esacove
Modernizing Sexuality: U.S. HIV Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa

Modernizing Sexuality: U.S. HIV Prevention in Sub-Saharan Africa

by Anne Esacove

eBook

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Overview

Moving beyond the boundaries of HIV scholarship, Modernizing Sexuality shows how Western idealizations of normative sexuality and the power of modernity intersect in U.S. HIV prevention policy. In this book, Anne Esacove gathers interview, archival, and ethnographic data from the United States and Malawi to reveal failing U.S. prevention efforts. As seen in the promotion of "love matches" and women's right to "say no" to sex, modernization embedded within U.S. policy actually limits action against this widespread epidemic, and even exacerbates HIV risk among women. Instead, by illuminating the collective solutions and multiple paths of prevention used by Malawians, Esacove's analysis expertly exposes these fundamental flaws and provides direction for potentially more effective strategies. Through this analysis, Modernizing Sexuality not only reveals major U.S. health policy flaws, but asks important questions about prevention narratives, medicalizing social justice advocacy, and feminist and sexuality theories as a guide for HIV prevention policy. Closing with an alternative narrative, Esacove reimagines risk and offers readers innovative prevention strategies to guide future policy endeavors.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780190610838
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 06/28/2016
Series: Sexuality, Identity, and Society
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Anne W. Esacove is Associate Director of the Alice Paul Center for Research on Gender, Sexuality & Women at the University of Pennsylvania.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Phillip L. Hammack Chapter 1: Tracing the Story of AIDS: An Introduction to Narrative, “African” AIDS and the U.S. Prevention Response Chapter 2: Embodied Risk: Gender, Modernity,&Tradition. Chapter 3: Love Matches: The Policy Prescription for “Good” Sex Chapter 4: The Sweetest Sex Possible...Under the Circumstances: The Everyday Prescription for “Good” Sex Chapter 5: Prevention Strategies: Individualized&Bureaucratic Practices for Creating Modern Actors Chapter 6: Renarrating Good Sex and Redirecting Prevention
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