Histories of HIV/AIDS in Western Europe
New and regional perspectives
Contributor(s)
Weston, Janet (editor)
Elizabeth, Hannah J. (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
The early 2020s marked the fortieth anniversary of the first confirmed cases of AIDS and a new wave of historical interest in the ongoing epidemic. This edited collection showcases some of this exciting new work, with a particular focus on less well-known histories from western Europe. Featuring research from social, cultural and public historians, sociologists and area studies scholars, its eight chapters address experiences, events and memories across regions and nations including Scotland, Wales, Italy, Norway and the Netherlands, paying careful attention to often-overlooked groups including drug users, sex workers, nurses, mothers and people in prison. Offering new perspectives on the development and implementation of policy, the nature of activism and expertise and which (or whose) histories are remembered, it is essential reading not only for historians of health but also for all those working in HIV/AIDS studies.
Keywords
HIV/ADISPublisher
Manchester University PressPublisher website
https://manchesteruniversitypress.co.uk/Publication date and place
Manchester, 2022Classification
Health, illness and addiction: social aspects
Chapters in this book
- Chapter 3 Responding to HIV/ AIDS in European prisons, 1980s– 2000s
- Chapter 4 Nursing a plague: nurses’ perspectives on their work during the United Kingdom HIV/ AIDS crisis, 1981– 96
- Chapter 6 Recovering mothers’ experiences of HIV/ AIDS health activism in Edinburgh, 1983– 2000
- Chapter 7 The European HIV/ AIDS Archive: building a queer counter- memory
- Chapter 8 Pandemics and national pride: collecting and curating the history of HIV/ AIDS