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Eating Spring Rice
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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 ...
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16 January 2007
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.
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.
Price: $34.95
Pages: 290
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date:
16 January 2007
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520247154
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
“The first major ethnographic study in the English language of the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the People’s Republic of China. . . . A truly remarkable book.”
Sandra Teresa Hyde is Associate Professor of Anthropology and Social Studies of Medicine at McGill University.
Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Notes on Transliteration
Introduction: The Cultural Politics of AIDS in Postreform China
PART 1 NARRATIVES OF THE STATE
1 The Aesthetics of Statistics
2 Everyday AIDS Practices: Risky Bodies and Contested Borders
PART 2 NARRATIVES OF JINGHONG, SIPSONGPANNA
3 Sex Tourism and Performing Ethnicity in Jinghong
4 Eating Spring Rice: Transactional Sex in a Beauty Salon
5 A Sexual Hydraulic: Commercial “Sex Workers” and Condoms
6 Moral Economies of Sexuality
Epilogue: What Is to Be Done?
Notes
References
Index
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
Notes on Transliteration
Introduction: The Cultural Politics of AIDS in Postreform China
PART 1 NARRATIVES OF THE STATE
1 The Aesthetics of Statistics
2 Everyday AIDS Practices: Risky Bodies and Contested Borders
PART 2 NARRATIVES OF JINGHONG, SIPSONGPANNA
3 Sex Tourism and Performing Ethnicity in Jinghong
4 Eating Spring Rice: Transactional Sex in a Beauty Salon
5 A Sexual Hydraulic: Commercial “Sex Workers” and Condoms
6 Moral Economies of Sexuality
Epilogue: What Is to Be Done?
Notes
References
Index