一起学,一起做,一起教:反思我们以艺术为基础的研究,教育和行动与艾滋病毒感染妇女

S. Greene, M. Muchenje, Jasmine Cotnam, K. Dunn, Peggy Frank, V. Nicholson, Apondi J Odhiambo, K. Shore, A. Kaida
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摘要

数千年来,人们一直在使用身体测绘技术来更好地了解自己、自己的身体和生活的世界。2001年,无国界医生组织(MSF)在南非卡耶利沙镇推出抗逆转录病毒药物时,艺术家简·所罗门(Jane Solomon)和心理学家乔纳森·摩根(Jonathan Morgan)为“长寿项目”改造了人体地图。身体测绘使参与者能够在面对强烈的艾滋病毒/艾滋病耻辱时讲述他们的故事。我们改编了“妇女、艺术和艾滋病保密的刑事化”(WATCH)研究的身体测绘,这是一种基于社区艺术的研究(CBR)方法,以更好地了解加拿大法律将艾滋病保密定为刑事犯罪对感染艾滋病毒的妇女的影响。我们的国家团队包括感染艾滋病毒的妇女、服务提供者和研究人员。这一反思说明了我们在加拿大与感染艾滋病毒的妇女一起学习、教学和开展身体测绘讲习班的集体和反复的过程。我们将身体测绘作为一种以艺术为基础的CBR方法来分享我们的经验,我们作为研究人员的角色如何扩展到包括社区教育,倡导和小组促进,以及我们如何体现艺术家-研究人员身份,因为我们以积极的方式传播我们的研究,使公众参与将艾滋病毒保密法律视为犯罪的法律,请访问-à-vis身体测绘画廊。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Learning, Doing and Teaching Together: Reflecting on our Arts Based Approach to Research, Education and Activism with and for Women Living with HIV
Body Mapping has been used for thousands of years by people who want to achieve a better understanding of themselves, their bodies and the world they live in. Artist Jane Solomon and psychologist Jonathan Morgan transformed Body Mapping for the “Long Life Project”, during the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) roll-out of antiretrovirals in Khayelitsha township, South Africa in 2001. Body mapping enables participants to tell their stories in the face of intense HIV/AIDS stigma. We adapted Body Mapping for the Women, Art and Criminalizaton of HIV Non-Disclosure (WATCH) study, a community arts based research (CBR) approach to better understand the impact that Canadian laws criminalizing HIV non-disclosure have on women living with HIV. Our national team includes women living with HIV, service providers, and researchers. This reflection illustrates our collective and iterative process of learning, teaching and doing body mapping workshops with women living with HIV in Canada. We share our experiences of coming to Body Mapping as an arts-based approach to CBR, how our roles as researchers stretched to include community-based education, advocacy, and group facilitation, and how we embodied the artist-researcher identity as we disseminate our research in ways that actively engage the general public on laws criminalizing HIV nondisclosure laws vis-à-vis Body Mapping galleries.
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