Literature DB >> 24682645

Beyond prevention: containment rhetoric in the case of bug chasing.

Jennifer Malkowski1.   

Abstract

Bug chasing, the practice of pursuing HIV positive sexual partners in order to acquire HIV, presents multiple dilemmas for health affiliates in terms of how to address discourses and practices that challenge widely held beliefs about health and medicine. In order to examine how researchers respond to controversial counterpublic rhetorics, this essay chronicles the construction of "bug chasing" in published social science literature. Guided by a theory of containment rhetoric, I analyze how bug chasers are configured in the language of social science used to describe and explain them. I find that social scientific coverage of bug chasing often addresses the behavior using a recipe of rhetorical containment: first, authors gaze upon bug chasers via distanced descriptions of the community; second, authors characterize the behavior as exhibiting an idealistic naiveté; and, third, authors stress the inconceivable, and therefore reproachable, sacrifice that bug chasing ultimately demands of its onlookers and participants. In closing, I evaluate the consequences of this containment rhetoric and offer three rhetorical maneuvers to aid future scholarship that examines the discourses and communities that counter dominant health ideologies.

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Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24682645     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-014-9280-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  14 in total

1.  An "Urban legend" of global proportion: an analysis of nonfiction accounts of the Ebola virus.

Authors:  R A Weldon
Journal:  J Health Commun       Date:  2001 Jul-Sep

2.  Media: using 'bug chasers'.

Authors:  Seth Mnookin
Journal:  Newsweek       Date:  2003-02-17

3.  (In/Out)side AIDS activism: searching for a critically engaged politics.

Authors:  J Elizabeth Clark
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2004

4.  Bug chasing and gift giving: the potential for HIV transmission among barebackers on the internet.

Authors:  Christian Grov; Jeffrey T Parsons
Journal:  AIDS Educ Prev       Date:  2006-12

5.  Using cultural beliefs and patterns to improve mammography utilization among African-American women: the Witness Project.

Authors:  E J Bailey; D O Erwin; P Belin
Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc       Date:  2000-03       Impact factor: 1.798

6.  Patient trust in physicians and shared decision-making among African-Americans with diabetes.

Authors:  Monica E Peek; Rita Gorawara-Bhat; Michael T Quinn; Angela Odoms-Young; Shannon C Wilson; Marshall H Chin
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2012-10-10

Review 7.  Under the shadow of Tuskegee: African Americans and health care.

Authors:  V N Gamble
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1997-11       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  Communicating stigma: the pro-ana paradox.

Authors:  Daphna Yeshua-Katz; Nicole Martins
Journal:  Health Commun       Date:  2012-08-08

9.  Is 'bareback' a useful construct in primary HIV-prevention? Definitions, identity and research.

Authors:  A Carballo-Diéguez; A Ventuneac; J Bauermeister; G W Dowsett; C Dolezal; R H Remien; I Balan; M Rowe
Journal:  Cult Health Sex       Date:  2009-01

Review 10.  Barebacking: a review of the literature.

Authors:  Rigmor C Berg
Journal:  Arch Sex Behav       Date:  2009-01-22
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