The Unseen Things: Women, Secrecy, and HIV in Northern Nigeria
What do HIV-positive women in Nigeria face as they seek meaningful lives with a deeply discrediting disease? Kathryn A. Rhine uncovers the skillful ways women defuse concerns about their wellbeing and the ability to maintain their households. Rhine shows how this ethic of concealment involves masking their diagnosis, unfaithful husbands, and unsupportive families while displaying their beauty, generosity, and vitality. As Rhine observes, collusion with counselors and support group leaders to deflect stigma, secure respectability, and find love features prominently in the lives of ordinary women who hope for a brighter future as the HIV epidemic continues to expand.

"1122629450"
The Unseen Things: Women, Secrecy, and HIV in Northern Nigeria
What do HIV-positive women in Nigeria face as they seek meaningful lives with a deeply discrediting disease? Kathryn A. Rhine uncovers the skillful ways women defuse concerns about their wellbeing and the ability to maintain their households. Rhine shows how this ethic of concealment involves masking their diagnosis, unfaithful husbands, and unsupportive families while displaying their beauty, generosity, and vitality. As Rhine observes, collusion with counselors and support group leaders to deflect stigma, secure respectability, and find love features prominently in the lives of ordinary women who hope for a brighter future as the HIV epidemic continues to expand.

80.0 In Stock
The Unseen Things: Women, Secrecy, and HIV in Northern Nigeria

The Unseen Things: Women, Secrecy, and HIV in Northern Nigeria

by Kathryn A. Rhine
The Unseen Things: Women, Secrecy, and HIV in Northern Nigeria

The Unseen Things: Women, Secrecy, and HIV in Northern Nigeria

by Kathryn A. Rhine

Hardcover

$80.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

What do HIV-positive women in Nigeria face as they seek meaningful lives with a deeply discrediting disease? Kathryn A. Rhine uncovers the skillful ways women defuse concerns about their wellbeing and the ability to maintain their households. Rhine shows how this ethic of concealment involves masking their diagnosis, unfaithful husbands, and unsupportive families while displaying their beauty, generosity, and vitality. As Rhine observes, collusion with counselors and support group leaders to deflect stigma, secure respectability, and find love features prominently in the lives of ordinary women who hope for a brighter future as the HIV epidemic continues to expand.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780253021311
Publisher: Indiana University Press
Publication date: 04/04/2016
Pages: 214
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.80(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kathryn A. Rhine is a medical anthropologist and associate professor at the University of Kansas. She is editor (with John M. Janzen, Glenn Adams and Heather Aldersey) of Medical Anthropology in Global Africa and her work has appeared in Anthropological Quarterly, Africa Today, and Ethnos.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Things Unseen
1. First Loves
2. Twice Married
3. Dilemmas of Disclosure
4. Intimate Ethics
5. Hope
Conclusion: Evidence and Substance
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Washington Universityin St. Louis - Carolyn Sargent

The Unseen Things is a collection of poignant narratives documenting how HIV positive women in northern Nigeria maintain hope and assert agency while living with a highly stigmatized disease. This is an ethnographic masterpiece, detailing how women embody normalcy, particularly as they seek marriage partners in the aftermath of their diagnosis. The book is especially innovative in its rich detail about desire, pleasure and love, and the strategies men and women use to reconstitute relationships after testing positive for HIV. Among the provocative themes embedded in women's accounts is the currency of secrets in the moral economy of gender and kin relations. Rhine identifies the creative ways women attempt to carry out social goals using silence, lies, and indirect speech. The voices of these women speak to the centrality of hope in their pursuit of health, love, marriage, children, and prosperity, often against barriers of structural inequality.

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews