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Fatal Advice: How Safe-Sex Education Went Wrong (Series Q)
 
 
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Fatal Advice: How Safe-Sex Education Went Wrong (Series Q) [Paperback]

Cindy Patton (Author)

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Book Description

April 24, 1996 Series Q
The American public responded to the first cases of AIDS with fear and panic. Both policymakers and activists were concerned not only with stopping the spread of the disease, but also with guiding the public’s response toward those already infected. Fatal Advice is an examination of how the nation attempted, with mixed results, to negotiate the fears and concerns brought on by the epidemic. A leading writer on the cultural politics of AIDS, Cindy Patton guides us through the thicket of mass-media productions, policy and public health enterprises, and activist projects as they sprang up to meet the challenge of the epidemic, shaping the nation’s notion of what safe-sex is and who ought to know what about it.
There is the official story, and then there is another, involving local groups and AIDS activists. Going back to early government and activist attempts to spread information, Patton traces a slow separation between official advice and that provided by those on the front lines in the battle against AIDS. She shows how American anxieties about teen sex played into the nation’s inadequate education and protection of its young people, and chronicles the media’s attempts to encourage compassion without broaching the touchy subject of sex or disrupting the notion that AIDS was a disease of social and sexual outcasts. Her overview of the relationship between shifting medical perceptions and safe-sex advice reveals why radical safe-sex educators eventually turned to sexually explicit, including pornographic, representations to spread their message—and why even these extreme tactics could not overcome the misguided national teaching on AIDS.
Patton closes with a stirring manifesto, an urgent call to action for all those who do not want to see the hard lessons of AIDS education and activism wasted, or, with these lessons, the loss of so many more lives.


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Problematizing the variable meanings of the term safe sex "not just as epidemiologists disagreed on their transmission data, but more important, as the various strategies for policing, reshaping, and politicizing sexuality converged under this initially innocent enough term," Patton examines the ways that the United States has negotiated the fears and concerns brought on by the AIDS epidemic. After analyzing the tactics of mass media, public health agencies, and activists, she offers a provocative manifesto that among other strategies advocates "thinking of sex as multiple vernaculars as a good antidote to a national pedagogy that language transparently communicates, rather than excludes, polices, incites." Patton (English, Temple Univ.), the author of Inventing AIDS (Routledge, 1990), posits a powerfully subversive critique, but her academic prose may prove cumbersome for some lay readers.
James E. Van Buskirk, San Francisco P.L.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

“A book of life-and-death importance on the politics of safe-sex. I can think of few other books that contribute so significantly to both cultural criticism and, in every sense of the term, public health.”—Constance Penley, author of The Future of an Illusion and coeditor of Male Trouble


“An urgent and important work. Once again, Patton’s usual brilliance is much in evidence—her irreverent and eclectic roving around different cultural and disciplinary domains, her perceptive readings of specific texts, her ear to various subcultural grounds, her wisdom based on personal history in the queer media and AIDS community movements.”—Thomas Waugh, author of The Fruit Machine

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In 1989, an attentive gay male student helped me cue the video for a paper I was about to give on heterosexual pornography. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
safe sex organizing, national pedagogy, safe sex projects, sexual vernaculars, queer codes, fatal advice, safe sex educators, bawdy terms, safe sex techniques, compassionate citizen, safe sex education, safe sex campaigns, urban gay men, gay teens, safe company, heterosexual youth, gay male sexuality, folk terms, drug injectors, practicing safe sex, deviant bodies, come shot
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
The Only Weapon We Have, Visualizing Safe Sex, The Erotics of Innocence, Magic Johnson, Surgeon General, Uncle Eddie, Ali Geertz, New York Times, Play Safely, Ryan White, United States, David Kamens, Eddie Savitz, Philadelphia Inquirer, Surge Studios
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