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Artikelnummer: SK0012344-NL20260521-135915 Categorie: Tag:

Titel: Unimagined Community

Schrijver: Robert Thornton

Bindingswijze: Paperback

EAN: 9780520255531

Conditie: Goed

Staat van dit boek
Elk boek is handmatig gecontroleerd. Vragen? Stuur gerust een bericht.

Condities
Als nieuw Zo goed als nieuw, geen tot vrijwel geen gebruikssporen.
Goed Lichte gebruikssporen mogelijk, meestal geen aantekeningen.
Redelijk Zichtbaar gebruikt, kan sporen of aantekeningen bevatten.
Nieuw Ongelezen en in nieuwe staat.

Beschrijving:
With an anthropological approach, this work focuses on a central conundrum surrounding AIDS in Africa. It explores why HIV prevalence fell during 1990s in Uganda despite that country’s having one of Africa’s highest fertility rates, while, during the same period, HIV prevalence rose in South Africa, a country with Africa’s lowest fertility rate.

“Like Durkheim in Suicide, Robert Thornton’s audacious ambition is to reveal the collective causes of intimate personal behavior; and he takes as the critical zone for his investigation the hidden network linking sexual partners to society at large. Unimagined Community succeeds as a compellingly original study of AIDS and as a work of deep anthropology. This book is a tour de force, reflected in the consistently high quality of the writing which never flags.”—Keith Hart, author of Money in an Unequal World

“Robert Thornton cuts an original and creative path through the massive AIDS literature assembled since the 1980s. Based on his view that sex is to be seen as a social relationship, not a behavior, he uses this as a building block in his analysis of the different configurations of sexual networks in Uganda and South Africa. Thornton departs from current purely epidemiological, demographic, sociological, and behavioral approaches, and also goes beyond the analysis and proposals for intervention to be found in most medical, public health, and policy studies. It is a study grand in conception and scale.”—Shirley Lindenbaum, coauthor of The Time of AIDS

This groundbreaking work, with its unique anthropological approach, sheds new light on a central conundrum surrounding AIDS in Africa and in so doing, reframes current debates about the disease. Robert J. Thornton explores why HIV prevalence fell during the 1990s in Uganda despite that country’s having one of Africa’s highest fertility rates, while, during the same period, HIV prevalence rose in South Africa, a country with Africa’s lowest fertility rate. Using anthropological, epidemiological, and mathematical methods, Thornton finds that culturally and socially determined differences in the structure of sexual networks – rather than changes in individual behavior – were responsible for these radical differences in HIV prevalence. His study exposes these invisible networks, or unimagined communities, unseen both by those who participate in them and by the social sciences, and opens a new area of investigation – the sexual network as social structure. Incorporating such factors as property, mobility, social status, and political authority into our understanding of AIDS transmission, Thornton offers a fresh vision of the disease, one that suggests new avenues for fighting it worldwide.