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This edited collection brings together scholarship from established
and emerging scholars in HIV/AIDS studies, French studies, Visual
Arts, and Dance. As French writers and artists from the past five
to ten years have been revisiting the AIDS crisis and its attendant
cultural amnesia, their work has brought about the necessity of
foregrounding vulnerability, exposure, risk, citizenship, and
trauma when considering disease. By way of probing "rawness" and
its varying iterations, this volume gathers analyses of HIV/AIDS
productions from the 1980s to today in the service of excavating
lessons learned by those living in proximity to disease. These
lessons provide important tools to understand and discuss both the
ongoing HIV and SARS-CoV-2 pandemics. The volume thus highlights
the specificities of the former while offering solutions on how to
discuss and mitigate the latter.
This book analyses contemporary gay "pig" masculinities, which have
emerged alongside antiretroviral therapies, online porn, and new
sexualised patterns of recreational drug use, examining how they
trouble modern European understandings of the male body, their
ethics, and their political underpinnings. This is the first book
to reflect on an increasingly visible new form of sexualised gay
masculinity, and the first monograph to move debates on condomless
sex amongst gay men beyond discourses of HIV and/or AIDS. It
contributes to existing critical histories of sexuality,
pornography and other sex media at a crucial juncture in the
history of gay male sex cultures and the HIV epidemic. The book
draws from fieldwork, interviews, archival research, visual
analysis, philosophy, queer theory, and cultural studies, using
empirical, critical, and speculative methodologies to better think
gay "pig" masculinities across their material, affective, ethical
and political dimensions, in a future-oriented,
politically-inflected, reflection on what queer bodies may become.
Spanning historical context to empirical and theoretical study,
Bareback Porn, Porous Masculinities, Queer Futures will be of key
interest to academics and students in sexuality studies, film,
media, visual culture, cultural studies, and porn studies concerned
with masculinities, sex and sexualities and their circulation
across an array of media.
This book analyses contemporary gay "pig" masculinities, which have
emerged alongside antiretroviral therapies, online porn, and new
sexualised patterns of recreational drug use, examining how they
trouble modern European understandings of the male body, their
ethics, and their political underpinnings. This is the first book
to reflect on an increasingly visible new form of sexualised gay
masculinity, and the first monograph to move debates on condomless
sex amongst gay men beyond discourses of HIV and/or AIDS. It
contributes to existing critical histories of sexuality,
pornography and other sex media at a crucial juncture in the
history of gay male sex cultures and the HIV epidemic. The book
draws from fieldwork, interviews, archival research, visual
analysis, philosophy, queer theory, and cultural studies, using
empirical, critical, and speculative methodologies to better think
gay "pig" masculinities across their material, affective, ethical
and political dimensions, in a future-oriented,
politically-inflected, reflection on what queer bodies may become.
Spanning historical context to empirical and theoretical study,
Bareback Porn, Porous Masculinities, Queer Futures will be of key
interest to academics and students in sexuality studies, film,
media, visual culture, cultural studies, and porn studies concerned
with masculinities, sex and sexualities and their circulation
across an array of media.
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