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Karma R. Chavez

    Karma R. Chávez est une critique rhétorique qui emploie des méthodologies textuelles et de terrain. Son travail privilégie les pratiques rhétoriques des groupes souvent marginalisés au sein des structures de pouvoir dominantes. Elle examine de manière critique comment ces communautés articulent la résistance et construisent leurs identités par la communication, offrant des analyses perspicaces de voix sous-représentées.

    The Borders of AIDS
    Queer Migration Politics
    • Queer Migration Politics

      Activist Rhetoric and Coalitional Possibilities

      • 232pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      4,6(40)Évaluer

      This book provides valuable tools for activists, queer scholars, feminists, and immigration scholars to enhance their understanding of political efficacy. It encourages critical thinking and offers innovative frameworks for analyzing the interplay between activism and theory, aiming to empower readers in their respective fields.

      Queer Migration Politics
    • As soon as US media and politicians became aware of AIDS in the early 1980s, fingers were pointed not only at the gay community but also at other countries and migrant communities, particularly Haitians, as responsible for spreading the virus. Evangelical leaders, public health officials, and the Reagan administration quickly capitalized on widespread fear of the new disease to call for quarantines, immigration bans, and deportations, scapegoating and blaming HIV-positive migrants--even as the rest of the world regarded the US as the primary exporter of the virus. In The Borders of AIDS, Karma Chávez demonstrates how such calls proliferated and how failure to impose a quarantine for HIV-positive citizens morphed into the successful enactment of a complete ban on the regularization of HIV-positive migrants--which lasted more than twenty years. News reports, congressional records, and AIDS activist archives reveal how queer groups and migrant communities built fragile coalitions to fight against the alienation of themselves and others, asserting their capacity for resistance and resiliency. Building on existing histories of HIV/AIDS, public health, citizenship, and immigration, Chávez establishes how politicians and public health officials treated different communities with HIV/AIDS and highlights the work these communities did to resist alienation.

      The Borders of AIDS