祖先和抗逆转录病毒药物:种族隔离后南非艾滋病毒/艾滋病的生物政治

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
P. Rotz
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She connects her analysis of policy and discourse with the experience of AIDS in Sol Plaatjie and Lawley, two squatter settlements where Decoteau conducted ethnographic, qualitative, and quantitative research between 2004 and 2009.Thabo Mbeki's denialist stance shaped AIDS policy from 1999 to 2007 andaccording to one study-resulted in more than 350,000 preventable deaths (pp. 81-83). Decoteau sees Mbeki's denialism as rooted in his commitment to independence, autonomy, and a vision of \"African Renaissance\" (p. 84). Mbeki attempted to resolve the postcolonial paradox and win political support by dismissing international public health's \"modem\" biomedical approach as racist, imperialist, and driven by pharmaceutical profit-seeking, while promoting \"traditional\" indigenous healing as an African alternative for an African disease. 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引用次数: 5

摘要

祖先和抗逆转录病毒药物:种族隔离后南非艾滋病毒/艾滋病的生物政治。克莱尔·劳里埃·德克托著。芝加哥:芝加哥大学出版社,2013。第16页,324页;参考书目,索引,25张黑白照片。32.50美元/£23.00。在《祖先与抗逆转录病毒》一书中,社会学家克莱尔·德克托研究了自南非首次非种族民主选举以来的二十年中艾滋病毒/艾滋病的生物政治。尽管摆脱了种族隔离制度的苛刻限制,但对许多贫穷的南非人来说,“让所有人过上更好的生活”的承诺仍未实现。在约翰内斯堡地区的两个棚户营地中,居民对解放的期望和经历在贫困和艾滋病的双重折磨下发生了冲突。德克多认为,南非国家面临着一种“后殖民悖论”。她将这一挑战描述为“需要尊重新自由主义资本的需求”和全球竞争力,同时肩负起“纠正根深蒂固的不平等、确保穷人的合法性和打造国家想象的责任”(第7页)。艾滋病和治疗一直是解决这一悖论的主要战场。德克多展示了姆贝基(Thabo Mbeki)总统和祖马(Jacob Zuma)总统是如何重新发明并运用“传统”和“现代”这两个殖民主义的比喻,作为凝聚合法性和行使政治权力的意识形态工具的。一系列具有象征意义的斗争塑造了这本书。德克多考察了“必须代表人民利益的领导人在支持全球资本的经济政策的同时所需要的狡猾的政治操作”(第14页)。她将她对政策和话语的分析与索尔普拉特杰和劳利的艾滋病经历联系起来。2004年至2009年,德克多在这两个棚户住区进行了人种学、定性和定量研究。塔博·姆贝基的否认立场影响了1999年至2007年的艾滋病政策,根据一项研究,这导致了超过35万例可预防的死亡(第81-83页)。德克多认为姆贝基的否定主义根植于他对独立、自治和“非洲复兴”愿景的承诺(第84页)。姆贝基试图解决后殖民悖论并赢得政治支持,他将国际公共卫生的"现代"生物医学方法视为种族主义、帝国主义和制药逐利的手段,同时推广"传统"土著治疗方法,将其作为非洲疾病的非洲替代方案。德克多将姆贝基政府描述为“一个死亡政治政权”,不能或不愿“关注贫穷和疾病等物质现实”(第106页)。治疗行动运动(TAC)和否认主义国家之间的对抗强化了德克多所说的“不可通约性的神话”——“传统的”本土治疗和“现代的”生物医学是不可调和的。咨询委员会宣称,"现代"生物医学的科学前景将拯救生命并解决根深蒂固的健康不平等问题,同时将"传统"土著治疗定性为不科学的,是抗逆转录病毒吸收的障碍,并存在药物不良相互作用的风险。...
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Ancestors and Antiretrovirals: The Biopolitics of HIV/AIDS in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Ancestors and Antiretrovirals: The Biopolitics of HIV/AIDS in Post-Apartheid South Africa. By Claire Laurier Decoteau. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2013. Pp. xvi, 324; bibliography, index, 25 b/w photographs. $32.50/£23.00 paper.In Ancestors and Antiretrovirals, sociologist Claire Decoteau examines the biopolitics of HIV/AIDS in the two decades since South Africa's first nonracial democratic election. Despite throwing off the onerous strictures of apartheid, the promise of "a better life for all" remains unrealized for many poor South Africans. In the two Johannesburg-area squatter camps that ground this study, residents' expectations and experiences of liberation collide beneath the overlapping afflictions of poverty and AIDS.Decoteau argues that a "postcolonial paradox" confronts the South African state. She describes this challenge as "the need to respect the demands of neoliberal capital" and global competiveness, while simultaneously shouldering "the responsibility to redress entrenched inequality, secure legitimacy from the poor, and forge a national imaginary" (p. 7). AIDS and healing have been primary sites in the battle to resolve this paradox. Decoteau demonstrates how presidents Thabo Mbeki and Jacob Zuma reinvented and deployed the colonial tropes of "tradition" and "modernity" as ideological tools to marshal legitimacy and exert political power.A series of symbolic struggles shape this book. Decoteau examines the "tricky political maneuvering required of leaders who must represent the interests of the people, while subscribing to the economic policies of global capital" (p. 14). She connects her analysis of policy and discourse with the experience of AIDS in Sol Plaatjie and Lawley, two squatter settlements where Decoteau conducted ethnographic, qualitative, and quantitative research between 2004 and 2009.Thabo Mbeki's denialist stance shaped AIDS policy from 1999 to 2007 andaccording to one study-resulted in more than 350,000 preventable deaths (pp. 81-83). Decoteau sees Mbeki's denialism as rooted in his commitment to independence, autonomy, and a vision of "African Renaissance" (p. 84). Mbeki attempted to resolve the postcolonial paradox and win political support by dismissing international public health's "modem" biomedical approach as racist, imperialist, and driven by pharmaceutical profit-seeking, while promoting "traditional" indigenous healing as an African alternative for an African disease. Decoteau characterizes the Mbeki government as "a thanatopolitical regime" unable or unwilling "to attend to the material realities of poverty and disease" (p. 106).The confrontation between the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) and the denialist state reinforced what Decoteau terms the "myth of incommensurability"-the idea that "traditional" indigenous healing and "modern" biomedicine are irreconcilably incompatible. The TAC avowed that the scientific promise of "modem" biomedicine would save lives and address entrenched health inequality, while characterizing "traditional" indigenous healing as unscientific, an obstacle to antiretroviral uptake, and a risk for adverse drug interactions. …
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
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0.00%
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期刊介绍: The International Journal of African Historical Studies (IJAHS) is devoted to the study of the African past. Norman Bennett was the founder and guiding force behind the journal’s growth from its first incarnation at Boston University as African Historical Studies in 1968. He remained its editor for more than thirty years. The title was expanded to the International Journal of African Historical Studies in 1972, when Africana Publishers Holmes and Meier took over publication and distribution for the next decade. Beginning in 1982, the African Studies Center once again assumed full responsibility for production and distribution. Jean Hay served as the journal’s production editor from 1979 to 1995, and editor from 1998 to her retirement in 2005. Michael DiBlasi is the current editor, and James McCann and Diana Wylie are associate editors of the journal. Members of the editorial board include: Emmanuel Akyeampong, Peter Alegi, Misty Bastian, Sara Berry, Barbara Cooper, Marc Epprecht, Lidwien Kapteijns, Meredith McKittrick, Pashington Obang, David Schoenbrun, Heather Sharkey, Ann B. Stahl, John Thornton, and Rudolph Ware III. The journal publishes three issues each year (April, August, and December). Articles, notes, and documents submitted to the journal should be based on original research and framed in terms of historical analysis. Contributions in archaeology, history, anthropology, historical ecology, political science, political ecology, and economic history are welcome. Articles that highlight European administrators, settlers, or colonial policies should be submitted elsewhere, unless they deal substantially with interactions with (or the affects on) African societies.
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