The AIDS Crisis and the Modern Self: Biographical Self-Construction in the Awareness of Finitude
In industrialized countries, HIV/AIDS is now increasingly perceived as a chronic condition. Yet initially, before combination therapy became available, this pandemic was widely associated with premature or even imminent death. Receiving the diagnosis typically led to a dramatic biographical disruption.
This highly original book turns this basic feature of life with HIV into the vantage point for a fascinating analysis of Western subjectivity. Combining a host of empirical observations with the debate on the modern self, the author argues that the self-construction of people with HIV highlights the precarious yet indispensable status of the self in contemporary Western society. Constructing one's biography in terms of self-actualization is in fact a manifestation of nihilism: it evokes a standard of certainty which, on closer examination, cannot be sustained.
Written in a lucid style, this unique book will appeal to scholars and students in the fields of sociology, social psychology, social anthropology, social theory and philosophy, as well as anybody interested in the relationship between the self and society or the experience of living with HIV/AIDS.
"1103784795"
The AIDS Crisis and the Modern Self: Biographical Self-Construction in the Awareness of Finitude
In industrialized countries, HIV/AIDS is now increasingly perceived as a chronic condition. Yet initially, before combination therapy became available, this pandemic was widely associated with premature or even imminent death. Receiving the diagnosis typically led to a dramatic biographical disruption.
This highly original book turns this basic feature of life with HIV into the vantage point for a fascinating analysis of Western subjectivity. Combining a host of empirical observations with the debate on the modern self, the author argues that the self-construction of people with HIV highlights the precarious yet indispensable status of the self in contemporary Western society. Constructing one's biography in terms of self-actualization is in fact a manifestation of nihilism: it evokes a standard of certainty which, on closer examination, cannot be sustained.
Written in a lucid style, this unique book will appeal to scholars and students in the fields of sociology, social psychology, social anthropology, social theory and philosophy, as well as anybody interested in the relationship between the self and society or the experience of living with HIV/AIDS.
74.49 In Stock
The AIDS Crisis and the Modern Self: Biographical Self-Construction in the Awareness of Finitude

The AIDS Crisis and the Modern Self: Biographical Self-Construction in the Awareness of Finitude

by S. Rinken
The AIDS Crisis and the Modern Self: Biographical Self-Construction in the Awareness of Finitude

The AIDS Crisis and the Modern Self: Biographical Self-Construction in the Awareness of Finitude

by S. Rinken

eBook2000 (2000)

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Overview

In industrialized countries, HIV/AIDS is now increasingly perceived as a chronic condition. Yet initially, before combination therapy became available, this pandemic was widely associated with premature or even imminent death. Receiving the diagnosis typically led to a dramatic biographical disruption.
This highly original book turns this basic feature of life with HIV into the vantage point for a fascinating analysis of Western subjectivity. Combining a host of empirical observations with the debate on the modern self, the author argues that the self-construction of people with HIV highlights the precarious yet indispensable status of the self in contemporary Western society. Constructing one's biography in terms of self-actualization is in fact a manifestation of nihilism: it evokes a standard of certainty which, on closer examination, cannot be sustained.
Written in a lucid style, this unique book will appeal to scholars and students in the fields of sociology, social psychology, social anthropology, social theory and philosophy, as well as anybody interested in the relationship between the self and society or the experience of living with HIV/AIDS.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789401595025
Publisher: Springer-Verlag New York, LLC
Publication date: 04/17/2013
Series: International Library of Ethics, Law, and the New Medicine , #3
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 476 KB

Table of Contents

1. HIV and the self.- 2. The problem of finitude.- 3. Observing selves.- 4. The “diagnosis of the self”.- 5. From invalidation to reinforcement.- 6. Seeking shelter amongst peers.- 7. Contrasting patterns.- 8. Mortal, all too mortal.- 9. Thinking of finitude.- 10. HIV, mortality and the self.
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