Image for At Odds With Aids

At Odds With Aids : Thinking and Talking About a Virus

Part of the Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics series
See all formats and editions

What does it mean to oppose AIDS, to be at odds with AIDS?

What kind of rupture with history does AIDS represent?

How does AIDS and what is said about AIDS relate to gay identity?

How does AIDS relate to thinking and acting, particularly deconstructive thinking?

The author confronts these questions from a broad philosophical background that ranges from Kant, Nietzsche, Kierkegaard, and Heidegger to contemporary thought concerning gay activism and AIDS research, all brought together in an effort to find a philosophical language capable of doing justice to the singularity of lived experience in the shadow of AIDS.

In examining what AIDS reveals about the conditions of existence, Garc'a D ttmann develops the idea of the dis-unity or at-odds-ness of existence, of the non-belonging that characterizes the marginalized, outcast, or abandoned, and exposes human existence itself.

He analyzes what AIDS reveals about the character of history through two intertwined issues.

First, he examines arguments bearing on the epochal significance of AIDS, the idea that AIDS reveals something uniquely characteristic of our time, hence that the epidemic marks a historical caesura. Second, he develops a theory of historical witnessing suggesting that the phenomena of historical event and bearing witness are not at all separate, but instead are co-originary, inhering in the same complex.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
£20.79 Save 20.00%
RRP £25.99
Product Details
Stanford University Press
0804724385 / 9780804724388
Paperback / softback
01/08/1996
United States
English
xv, 144p.
22 cm
general /postgraduate /research & professional /undergraduate Learn More