Back to Search Start Over

Eating Spring Rice : The Cultural Politics of AIDS in Southwest China

Authors :
Sandra Teresa Hyde
Sandra Teresa Hyde
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Eating Spring Rice is the first major ethnographic study of HIV/AIDS in China. Drawing on more than a decade of ethnographic research (1995-2005), primarily in Yunnan Province, Sandra Teresa Hyde chronicles the rise of the HIV epidemic from the years prior to the Chinese government's acknowledgement of this public health crisis to post-reform thinking about infectious-disease management. Hyde combines innovative public health research with in-depth ethnography on the ways minorities and sex workers were marked as the principle carriers of HIV, often despite evidence to the contrary.Hyde approaches HIV/AIDS as a study of the conceptualization and the circulation of a disease across boundaries that requires different kinds of anthropological thinking and methods. She focuses on'everyday AIDS practices'to examine the links between the material and the discursive representations of HIV/AIDS. This book illustrates how representatives of the Chinese government singled out a former kingdom of Thailand, Sipsongpanna, and its indigenous ethnic group, the Tai-Lüe, as carriers of HIV due to a history of prejudice and stigma, and to the geography of the borderlands. Hyde poses questions about the cultural politics of epidemics, state-society relations, Han and non-Han ethnic dynamics, and the rise of an AIDS public health bureaucracy in the post-reform era.

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9780520247154, 9780520247147, and 9780520939486
Database :
eBook Index
Journal :
Eating Spring Rice : The Cultural Politics of AIDS in Southwest China
Publication Type :
eBook
Accession number :
201673