AIDS Doesn't Show Its Face

AIDS Doesn't Show Its Face Inequality, Morality, and Social Change in Nigeria

Paperback (04 Apr 2014)

Save $2.41

  • RRP $31.41
  • $29.00
Add to basket

Includes delivery to the United States

10+ copies available online - Usually dispatched within two working days

Publisher's Synopsis

AIDS and Africa are indelibly linked in popular consciousness, but despite widespread awareness of the epidemic, much of the story remains hidden beneath a superficial focus on condoms, sex workers, and antiretrovirals. Africa gets lost in this equation, Daniel Jordan Smith argues, transformed into a mere vehicle to explain AIDS, and in AIDS Doesn't Show Its Face, he offers a powerful reversal, using AIDS as a lens through which to view Africa.

Drawing on twenty years of fieldwork in Nigeria, Smith tells a story of dramatic social changes, ones implicated in the same inequalities that also factor into local perceptions about AIDS-inequalities of gender, generation, and social class. Nigerians, he shows, view both social inequality and the presence of AIDS in moral terms, as kinds of ethical failure. Mixing ethnographies that describe everyday life with pointed analyses of public health interventions, he demonstrates just how powerful these paired anxieties-medical and social-are, and how the world might better alleviate them through a more sensitive understanding of their relationship.

Book information

ISBN: 9780226108834
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Imprint: The University of Chicago Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 362.1969792009669
DEWEY edition: 23
Language: English
Number of pages: 208
Weight: 338g
Height: 232mm
Width: 160mm
Spine width: 23mm