AIDS, Sex, and Culture: Global Politics and Survival in Southern AfricaISBN: 978-1-4051-5586-1
Hardcover
304 pages
February 2009, Wiley-Blackwell
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"AIDS activists and policy makers will be both impressed and ultimately heartened." (CHOICE, January 2010)"A brilliant analysis of sadness, deprivation and hope. A must-read for anyone interested in the social fabric of contemporary South Africa, for anyone committed to gender justice around AIDS."
Michael Burawoy, University of California, Berkeley
"AIDS, Sex, and Culture greatly deepens our understanding
of the politics of HIV/AIDS in South Africa. Susser's rich
ethnography shows how local activism and women's desire for
autonomy profoundly affect international, national, and scientific
enterprises."
Emily Martin, New York University
"Ida Susser´s book is an exemplary demonstration of the
social value of great scholarly research. It shows how patriarchal
culture provides the ground for the formation of destructive
networks of poverty, sex, and aids. Based on Susser´s
cross-cultural ethnographic work it is a master piece of
intellectually innovative, socially relevant research. It will be a
key reference for social scientists aiming to understand the world
in order to overcome our current misery. It should be mandatory
reading for students, academics, and policy makers around the
world."
Manuel Castells, University of California, Berkeley
An insightful, comprehensive, provocative personal and
anthropological perspective across two decades on how the
construction of gender has shaped responses to the HIV/AIDS
epidemic in women in southern Africa and globally.
A must read for anyone interested in understanding and making a
meaningful difference to the evolving HIV epidemic in women
globally and in southern Africa.
Quarraisha Abdool Karim, Centre for the AIDS Programme of
Research in South Africa
Ida Susser offers a powerful statement of the forces that have
shaped the epidemiology of AIDS in Africa. This visceral but
unsentimental account places women's sexuality and reproductive
autonomy -- as well as their unsubmissive assertion of rights to
knowledge, health care, and bodily integrity --at the vortex of
South Africa's transformations and is symptomatic of how gender
inequities shape the face of AIDS in the world today.
Ann Stoler, The New School