Article ID: CBB107429056

Pandemic Responses and the Strengths of Health Systems: A Review of Global AIDS Historiography in Light of COVID-19 (2023)

unapi

Reiko Kanazawa (Author)


Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Volume: 114
Issue: S1
Pages: S162-S205


Publication Date: 2023
Edition Details: IsisCB Special Issue: Bibliographic Essays on the History of Pandemics
Language: English

This paper surveys the historiography of the global response to HIV/AIDS. Since 1981, when the disease was first identified, there have been great strides in the medical and biological sciences in understanding the impact of the new virus on the human immune system. Although there is still no successful vaccine, antiretroviral (ART) treatment continues to improve the likelihood of HIV-positive people living long and healthy lives. We have also seen a few exciting cases of full recovery, which will allow scientists to explore new avenues towards a cure. Yet the AIDS pandemic is by no means over: 40 million have died and over 35 million individuals still live with HIV. More importantly, as historians and scholars in the humanities and social sciences have been pointing out since the early 1980s, HIV brought to light how non-medical factors play a critical role in a successful disease response. As the global community faces the aftermath of a new pandemic, it is timely to examine how broader social, economic, political, and cultural factors influence individual experiences of disease at local, national, international, and global scales. This essay examines how scholars have written historically about the HIV pandemic, using a variety of methods and approaches: from traditional histories of medicine to anthropologies of development. While HIV has sparked a massive corpus of historical reflection from a variety of disciplines, its contemporaneity means that “global AIDS historiography” cannot yet be described as a cohesive academic conversation. Yet what unites the scholarship, this essay argues, is its use of HIV to examine how and why post-war social and economic systems have achieved health objectives for some populations and not others.

...More
Included in

Article Weldon, Stephen P.; Sankaran, Neeraja (2023) Scholarship in the Time of COVID-19: An Introduction to the IsisCB Special Issue on Pandemics. Isis Bibliography of the History of Science (pp. 1-5). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB107429056/

Similar Citations

Article Valentina Parisi; Kavita Sivaramakrishnan; (2023)
The Limits of Linearity: Recasting Histories of Epidemics in the Global South (/isis/citation/CBB912171852/)

Article Monica H. Green; (2022)
A New Definition of the Black Death: Genetic Findings and Historical Interpretations (/isis/citation/CBB997380355/)

Article Lukas Engelmann; (2023)
Coinfection, Comorbidity, and Syndemics: On the Edges of Epidemic Historiography (/isis/citation/CBB555120181/)

Article Warwick Anderson; (April 2021)
The model crisis, or how to have critical promiscuity in the time of Covid-19 (/isis/citation/CBB248429145/)

Article Luisa Simonutti; (2020)
Paure, contaminazioni e alterità. Da Bacone a Kapuściński (/isis/citation/CBB346421875/)

Article Stefano Santasilia; (2020)
Pandemia e stili di vita: pazienza (/isis/citation/CBB845461986/)

Article Luisa Simonutti; (2020)
Uneasiness. John Locke e le inquietudini del presente (/isis/citation/CBB647837757/)

Article Kyle Harper; (2020)
Germs, genomes, and global history in the time of COVID-19 (/isis/citation/CBB422578756/)

Book Juan Del Llano; Lino Camprubi; (2021)
Sociedad Entre Pandemias (/isis/citation/CBB162353517/)

Article Anne-Emanuelle Birn; (2020)
Perspectivizing pandemics: (How) do epidemic histories criss-cross contexts? (/isis/citation/CBB751896961/)

Book Jacques Pépin; (2021)
The Origins of AIDS (/isis/citation/CBB084551418/)

Article Arnab Chakraborty; (2023)
COVID-19 Response in South Asia: Case Studies from India, Sri Lanka, and Pakistan (/isis/citation/CBB761997205/)

Article Davide Orsini; James A. Ostenson; Francesco Brigo; Mariano Martini; (2023)
Pandemics and Mental Disorders: From the Thought of the 19th Century Psychiatrist Andrea Verga to long-term effects of COVID-19 (/isis/citation/CBB934514442/)

Book Fernando Rosa; Alessandra Parodi; (2024)
Essere in una pandemia. Filosofia, medicina e Covid-19 (/isis/citation/CBB335674855/)

Article Michael P. Kelly; Federica Russo; (2021)
The epistemic values at the basis of epidemiology and public health (/isis/citation/CBB856188518/)

Article Bishnupriya Ghosh; (2021)
Epidemic Frontlines: The Slow Science of Observation (/isis/citation/CBB362021382/)

Essay Review Gómez, Pablo F.; (2013)
The Language of Epidemics: Narrative, Biology, and the Other from Smallpox to AIDS (/isis/citation/CBB001567009/)

Book Richard Andrew McKay; (2017)
Patient Zero and the Making of the Aids Epidemic (/isis/citation/CBB093085222/)

Book Alan Whiteside; (2017)
HIV & AIDS: A Very Short Introduction (/isis/citation/CBB155086702/)

Authors & Contributors
Simonutti, Luisa
Fernando Rosa
Whiteside, Alan
Juan Del Llano
Brigo, Francesco
Martini, Mariano
Journals
Laboratorio dell'ISPF
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
Journal of Global History
De Medio Aevo
Mefisto: Rivista di medicina, filosofia, storia
William and Mary Quarterly
Publishers
Fundación Gaspar Casal
University of Chicago Press
Oxford University Press
Franco Angeli
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Pandemics
Epidemics
Public health
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)
Medicine and society
AIDS (disease); HIV / AIDS
People
Andrea Verga
Rosenberg, Charles E.
Time Periods
21st century
20th century, late
20th century
Early modern
Modern
Medieval
Places
United States
Africa
Democratic Republic of the Congo
South Asia
Sri Lanka
South Africa
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment