Literature DB >> 10807028

Part 1: HIV as'the line in the sand'.

M R Botnick1.   

Abstract

There is a growing rift between HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men, which finds expression in social, economic, structural and political divisiveness that, if not resolved, may 'kill' the "gay liberation movement." While disasters generally tend to create organizational solidarity, the AIDS crisis has operated in reverse, spawning a variety of competitive AIDS service organizations, alienating seropositive gays from the mainstream gay community, and in turn disenfranchising seronegative gay men as human and financial resources are redirected toward persons living with HIV and AIDS. Serostatus has become a social marker of societal status, operating in a bimodal discriminatory manner. Seronegative gay men experience discrimination from within the gay community as funding for and services to this sector diminish. Seropositive gay men (and the organizations that provide for some of their needs) have culturally, economically and socially dismissed the socio/psychological needs of seronegative gay men (survivor guilt, safer sex education, etc.) in favour of providing social and resource-based services to seropositive gay men. As the disparities in service and advocacy increase, the social distance between the gay movement and the AIDS movement correspondingly increases. If this trend continues, the social gap will serve further to push HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men into polarized camps, resulting in a wider separation of the gay movement and the AIDS movement. The stigmatization of HIV-positive people will subsequently increase both within and outside the gay movement, and any ability to present a unified Gay Liberation front will correspondingly diminish. Additionally, the emergent notion within and without the gay communities that to be gay is to be HIV-positive will solidify. This will (a) further stigmatize all gay men in the eyes of the non-gay population, and (b) exacerbate the rift between HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men within the gay community, reversing the stigma of HIV such that to be HIV-negative will be a marker of non-gay identity. In short, seropositivity will become the defining element of gayness.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10807028     DOI: 10.1300/J082v38n04_03

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Homosex        ISSN: 0091-8369


  4 in total

1.  Stigma towards PLWHA: the role of internalized homosexual stigma in Latino gay/bisexual male and transgender communities.

Authors:  Jesus Ramirez-Valles; Yamile Molina; Jessica Dirkes
Journal:  AIDS Educ Prev       Date:  2013-06

Review 2.  HIV-related stigma within communities of gay men: a literature review.

Authors:  Peter J Smit; Michael Brady; Michael Carter; Ricardo Fernandes; Lance Lamore; Michael Meulbroek; Michel Ohayon; Tom Platteau; Peter Rehberg; Jürgen K Rockstroh; Marc Thompson
Journal:  AIDS Care       Date:  2011-11-25

3.  Violence, abuse and discrimination: key factors militating against control of HIV/AIDS among the LGBTI sector.

Authors:  Dominic Targema Abaver; Elphina Nomabandla Cishe
Journal:  SAHARA J       Date:  2018-12

4.  Intragroup Stigma Among Men Who Have Sex with Men: Data Extraction from Craigslist Ads in 11 Cities in the United States.

Authors:  Tamar Goldenberg; Dhrutika Vansia; Rob Stephenson
Journal:  JMIR Public Health Surveill       Date:  2016-02-05
  4 in total

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