Strings Attached: AIDS and the Rise of Transnational Connections in Africa
Nadine Beckmann, Alessandro Gusman, and Catrine Shroff
Abstract
Religious ideas about health, sexuality, and the body have had great influence on the perceptions of HIV/AIDS in the African continent. At the same time, AIDS as a disease and as a realm of international aid interventions is heavily impacting on socio-religious formations and developments in Africa. Religion and AIDS are transforming African public and private domains together. Yet, scant attention is paid to the ways in which this intertwined engagement between the domains of religion and the domains of AIDS prevention, care, and treatment in African societies becomes increasingly linked to a ... More
Religious ideas about health, sexuality, and the body have had great influence on the perceptions of HIV/AIDS in the African continent. At the same time, AIDS as a disease and as a realm of international aid interventions is heavily impacting on socio-religious formations and developments in Africa. Religion and AIDS are transforming African public and private domains together. Yet, scant attention is paid to the ways in which this intertwined engagement between the domains of religion and the domains of AIDS prevention, care, and treatment in African societies becomes increasingly linked to an outside world. This book is unique in drawing attention to the transnationalisation of religion and AIDS in Africa and addresses the question why so much of the transnational religious engagement with the disease has seemed to serve conservative values, such as disapproval of sex before marriage and condemnation of homosexuals. Introducing concepts from the study of transnationalism into the study of religion and AIDS in Africa, the book offers a new set of conceptual tools for the analysis of how religious ideologies and moralities have been shaping the experience of AIDS in Africa. The disciplinary scope for studying this phenomenon is wide-ranging as it speaks to anthropological, sociological, developmental, historical, and religious studies, and global health perspectives on these issues. The book includes extensive examples from all over Africa. It shows how African public domains are being shaped by forces that are transnational, steered by forceful religious and moral agendas, and often with substantial international resources behind them. These are, so the book argues, the strings attached to the present-day transnational, religious involvement with AIDS in Africa.
Keywords:
HIV/AIDS,
health,
sexuality,
religion,
development,
transnationalism,
Africa
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2014 |
Print ISBN-13: 9780197265680 |
Published to British Academy Scholarship Online: January 2015 |
DOI:10.5871/bacad/9780197265680.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
Nadine Beckmann, editor
Lecturer in Social Anthropology, University of Roehampton
Alessandro Gusman, editor
Research Fellow, University of Turin
Catrine Shroff, editor
Research Fellow, Centre of African Studies, University of Copenhagen
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