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Blood Loss : A Love Story of AIDS, Activism, and Art

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In 1991, 16-year-old activist Keiko Lane joined the Los Angeles chapters of Queer Nation and ACT UP.

They protested against legislation aimed at dismantling rights for LGBTQ people, people living with HIV, and immigrants, while fighting for needle exchange programs, reproductive justice, safer sex education, hospice funding, and the right to die with dignity.

At the same time, they were a queer chosen family of friends and lovers who took care of one another in sickness and in health.

Sometimes they helped each other die. By the time Lane turned 22, most of them had died of AIDS.

In her evocative memoir, Lane weaves together the love stories and afterlives of queer resistance and survival, against the landscape of the Rodney King Rebellion, the movement for queer rights, and the censorship of queer artists and sexualities.

Lane interrogates the social construction of power against and in queer communities of color, and the recovery of sexual agency in the midst and aftermath of violence.

Luminous and powerfully moving, Blood Loss explores survival after those we love have died.

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£73.60 Save 20.00%
RRP £92.00
Product Details
Duke University Press
1478026553 / 9781478026556
Hardback
17/09/2024
United States
312 pages
152 x 229 mm, 572 grams