Power in the blood : a handbook on AIDS, politics, and communication

Bibliographic Information

Power in the blood : a handbook on AIDS, politics, and communication

edited by William N. Elwood

(LEA's communication series)

L. Erlbaum Assoceates, 1999

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Includes bibliographical references and indexes

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this single volume, William N. Elwood has gathered potent evidence of the impact that the HIV/AIDS epidemic has had on the world, its communities, and its inhabitants, and he addresses the role of communication in affecting the way in which people respond to AIDS. With a multidisciplinary group of contributors and topics ranging from political rhetoric to interpersonal discourse, Power in the Blood offers a multitude of ways in which to think about power, politics, HIV prevention, and people living with HIV. Readers will be able to use this information in class discussions, program designs, grant applications, and research, as well as in their own lives. With this volume, Elwood makes a thoroughly convincing argument that communication is the key to understanding, treating, and preventing AIDS, and he inspires further action toward the goal of ending the AIDS crisis.

Table of Contents

Contents: Introduction. Part I: The Political: Introductory Perspectives.W.N. Elwood, Burden of Sin: Transmitting Messages and Viruses in a Stigmatized Plague. K.A. Clark, Pink Water: The Archetype of Blood and the Pool of Infinite Contagion. M.J. Sobnosky, E. Hauser, Initiating or Avoiding Activism: Red Ribbons, Pink Triangles, and Public Argument About AIDS. C.B. McCoy, C. Miles, L.R. Metsch, The Medicalization of Discourse Within an AIDS Research Setting. Part II: The Civic: Campaigns and Policy.V.S. Nelson, The Reagan Administration's Response to AIDS: Conservative Argument and Conflict. K.M. German, J.L. Courtright, Politically Privileged Voices: Glaser and Fisher Address the 1992 Presidential Nominating Conventions. M.S. McKinney, B.G. Pepper, From Hope to Heartbreak: Bill Clinton and the Rhetoric of AIDS. R.A. Slagle, Scapegoating and Political Discourse: Representative Robert Dornan's Legislation of Morality Through HIV/AIDS. Part III: The Intrapersonal: Individuals and Behavior.S.J. Stevens, J.G. Bogart, Reducing HIV Risk Behaviors of Drug-Involved Women: Social, Economic, Medical, and Legal Constraints. W.N. Elwood, M.L. Williams, The Politics of Silence: Communicative Rules and HIV Prevention Issues in Gay Male Bathhouses. A. Estrada, G.A. Quintero, Redefining Categories of Risk and Identity: The Appropriation of AIDS Prevention Information and Constructions of Risk. K.A. Cameron, K. Witte, S. Nzyuko, Perceptions of Condoms and Barriers to Condom Use Along the Trans-Africa Highway in Kenya. Part IV: The Interpersonal: Relations Among Individuals.D.M. Harney, Lesbians on the Frontline: Battling AIDS, Gays, and the Myth of Community. M.R. Weeks, M. Grier, K. Radda, D. McKinley, AIDS and Social Relations of Power: Urban African-American Women's Discourse on the Contexts of Risk and Prevention. G.A. Yep, M. Pietri, In Their Own Words: Communication and the Politics of HIV Education for Transgenders and Transsexuals in Los Angeles. Y. Kellar-Guenther, The Power of Romance: Changing the Focus of AIDS Education Messages. L. Bennett, M. Travers, Stigma, Secrecy, and Isolation: The Impact of HIV/AIDS on Women in an Australian Study. P.J. Svenkerud, N. Rao, E.M. Rogers, Mass Media Effects Through Interpersonal Communication: The Role of "Twende na Wakati" on the Adoption of HIV/AIDS Prevention in Tanzania. Part V: The Public: Perspectives on Mass-Mediated Communication. T.N. Walters, L.M. Walters, S.H. Priest, Life on the Edge of the Precipice: Information Subsidy and the Rise of AIDS as a Public Issue, 1983-1989. B. Haller, AIDS as a Legally Defined Disability: Implications From News Media Coverage. K.B. Wright, AIDS, the Status Quo, and the Elite Media: An Analysis of the Guest Lists of "The MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour" and "Nightline." T.N. Walters, L.M. Walters, S.H. Priest, What We Say and How We Say It: The Influence of Psychosocial Characteristics and Message Content of HIV/AIDS Public Service Announcements. Part VI: The Programmatic: Relations Between People and Institutions. P.A. Gaist, AIDS Information and the National Institutes of Health. W.N. Elwood, Difference and Identification: Reconsidering the Indigenous Outreach Worker Model. L.K. Fuller, Media Manipulations and the AIDS/Breastfeeding Issue. M.C. Donovan, A Tough Sell: The Political Logic of Federal Needle-Exchange Policy. K. Greene, B. Cassidy, Ethical Choices Regarding Noncompliance: Prescribing Protease Inhibitors for HIV-Infected Female Adolescents. T.M. Steinfatt, J. Mielke, Communicating Danger: The Politics of AIDS in the Mekong Region. Part VII: The Synthesis: Conclusions and Projections. E.M. Rogers, C.L. Shefner-Rogers, Diffusion of Innovations and HIV/AIDS Prevention Research. W.N. Elwood, Victories to Win: Communicating HIV/AIDS Prevention and Tolerance.

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