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In 2003-2006, Patricia Henderson lived in the South African province of KwaZulu-Natal where she recorded the experiences of people living with HIV/AIDS. In this illuminating study, she recounts the concerns of rural people and explores local repertoires through which illness was folded into everyday life. The book spans a period when antiretroviral medication was not available, and moves on to a time when the treatment became accessible. Hope gradually became manifest in the recovery of a number of people through antiretroviral therapies and 'the return' of bodies they could recognise as their own. This research implies that protracted interaction with people over time, offers insights into the unfolding textures of everyday life, in particular in its focus on suffering, social and structural inequality, illness, violence, mourning, sensibility, care and intimacy. This title is available in the OAPEN Library - http://www.oapen.org.
List of contents
AIDS, Intimacy and Care in Rural KwaZulu-Natal - 2 Contents - 8 Acknowledgements - 10 Preface - 14 Introduction - 18 1 The Vertiginous Body and Social Metamorphosis - 42 2 Mortality and the Ethics of Ethnographic Research - 60 3 Children and Youth in Pursuit of Care - 84 4 Healers Negotiating the Local and the Global - 106 5 Love in a Time of Adversity - 128 6 On Accompanying the Ill - 154 Epilogue - 182 Appendix: Interlocutors and Research Methods - 188 Acronyms - 194 Glossary - 196 Notes - 202 Appendix: Interlocutors and Research Methods - 224 Bibliography - 226 Index - 244
About the author
Patricia C. Henderson is a lecturer in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Cape Town.