Women Take Care: Gender, Race, and the Culture of AIDS

Women Take Care: Gender, Race, and the Culture of AIDS

by Katie Hogan
Women Take Care: Gender, Race, and the Culture of AIDS

Women Take Care: Gender, Race, and the Culture of AIDS

by Katie Hogan

Hardcover

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Overview

Self-sacrificing mothers and forgiving wives, caretaking lesbians, and vigilant maternal surrogates—these "good women" are all familiar figures in the visual and print culture relating to AIDS. In a probing critique of that culture, Katie Hogan demonstrates ways in which literary and popular works use the classic image of the nurturing female to render "queer" AIDS more acceptable, while consigning women to conventional roles and reinforcing the idea that everyone with this disease is somehow suspect.

In times of crisis, the figure of the idealized woman who is modest and selfless has repeatedly surfaced in Western culture as a balm and a source of comfort—and as a means of mediating controversial issues. Drawing on examples from journalism, medical discourse, fiction, drama, film, television, and documentaries, Hogan describes how texts on AIDS reproduce this historically entrenched paradigm of sacrifice and care, a paradigm that reinforces biases about race and sexuality.

Hogan believes that the growing nostalgia for women's traditional roles has deflected attention away from women's own health needs. Throughout her book, she depicts caretaking as a fundamental human obligation, but one that currently falls primarily to those members of society with the least power. Only by rejecting the stereotype of the "good woman," she says, can Americans begin to view caretaking as the responsibility of the entire society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801436277
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 08/21/2001
Series: 12/15/2003
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.88(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Katie Hogan is Associate Professor of English and Director of Women's Studies at Carlow University in Pittsburgh. She is coeditor of Gendered Epidemic: Representation of Women in the Age of AIDS.

Table of Contents

Prefaceix
Acknowledgmentsxv
1Women and AIDS: Paradox of Visibility1
2Little Eva Revisited33
3Absent Mothers and Missing Children57
4The Lesbian Mammy80
5What Looks Like Progress: Black Feminist Narratives on HIV / AIDS102
6Conclusion: Beyond Sentimental AIDS130
Notes135
Works Cited157
Index171
About the Author179

What People are Saying About This

John Nguyet Erni

In this unique book, Katie Hogan makes a persuasive and timely contribution to the analysis of a continued problem in the social understanding of the AIDS crisis: the systematic devaluation of women's medical and social risks. Through careful literary and filmic readings, Hogan makes a strong and persuasive plea for the need to resist the sentimentalization that has worked to promote the nostalgic return of women to traditional roles. Women Take Care is a humane and important book.

Jeffrey Williams

Katie Hogan has already distinguished herself as one of the most prominent critics and scholars dealing with contemporary literature and representations of AIDS. Well-rooted in literary and historical images of illness and aimed toward promulgating a more progressive representation of women, her new book will become a central text.

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