Queer Emergent: Scandalous Stories from the Twilight of AIDS in Peru
In Queer Emergent, Justin Perez explores how advances in HIV prevention work alongside broader economic and political shifts in global health to shape queer subjectivities. Drawing on ethnographic research among gay and transgender communities in urban Amazonian Peru, Perez describes how queer social worlds emerge through scandalous storytelling—a practice of exaggerating and embellishing stories about everyday life that transgresses social norms and hierarchies. Perez shows that through such storytelling, gay and transgender communities contested the assumptions of global HIV prevention’s shift from the provision of costly antiretrovirals to the mitigation of social conditions like discrimination and stigma. He argues that the global ambition to “End AIDS” by 2030 is not just a technical project oriented at ending the epidemic, but also a project of sexual subjectification and ongoing social transformation. By taking seriously the scandalous stories that gay and transgender Peruvians circulated as they responded to new forms of HIV prevention, Perez reveals how they imagine possibilities of what could be as the effort to end AIDS continues to play out in the present.
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Queer Emergent: Scandalous Stories from the Twilight of AIDS in Peru
In Queer Emergent, Justin Perez explores how advances in HIV prevention work alongside broader economic and political shifts in global health to shape queer subjectivities. Drawing on ethnographic research among gay and transgender communities in urban Amazonian Peru, Perez describes how queer social worlds emerge through scandalous storytelling—a practice of exaggerating and embellishing stories about everyday life that transgresses social norms and hierarchies. Perez shows that through such storytelling, gay and transgender communities contested the assumptions of global HIV prevention’s shift from the provision of costly antiretrovirals to the mitigation of social conditions like discrimination and stigma. He argues that the global ambition to “End AIDS” by 2030 is not just a technical project oriented at ending the epidemic, but also a project of sexual subjectification and ongoing social transformation. By taking seriously the scandalous stories that gay and transgender Peruvians circulated as they responded to new forms of HIV prevention, Perez reveals how they imagine possibilities of what could be as the effort to end AIDS continues to play out in the present.
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Queer Emergent: Scandalous Stories from the Twilight of AIDS in Peru

Queer Emergent: Scandalous Stories from the Twilight of AIDS in Peru

by Justin Perez
Queer Emergent: Scandalous Stories from the Twilight of AIDS in Peru

Queer Emergent: Scandalous Stories from the Twilight of AIDS in Peru

by Justin Perez

eBook

$27.95 

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Overview

In Queer Emergent, Justin Perez explores how advances in HIV prevention work alongside broader economic and political shifts in global health to shape queer subjectivities. Drawing on ethnographic research among gay and transgender communities in urban Amazonian Peru, Perez describes how queer social worlds emerge through scandalous storytelling—a practice of exaggerating and embellishing stories about everyday life that transgresses social norms and hierarchies. Perez shows that through such storytelling, gay and transgender communities contested the assumptions of global HIV prevention’s shift from the provision of costly antiretrovirals to the mitigation of social conditions like discrimination and stigma. He argues that the global ambition to “End AIDS” by 2030 is not just a technical project oriented at ending the epidemic, but also a project of sexual subjectification and ongoing social transformation. By taking seriously the scandalous stories that gay and transgender Peruvians circulated as they responded to new forms of HIV prevention, Perez reveals how they imagine possibilities of what could be as the effort to end AIDS continues to play out in the present.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781478060789
Publisher: Duke University Press
Publication date: 04/11/2025
Series: Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 264
File size: 11 MB
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About the Author

Justin Perez is Assistant Professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments  vii
Introduction: Scandalous Stories of HIV Prevention 1
1. Stories That Scandalize: Transactional Sex and Postconflict Moral Imaginaries  36
2. Collaboration on the Cancha: Sustaining and Multiplying Social Relations through Scandalous Spectacles  63
3. Scandal at the Disco: Discrimination, Difference, and the Cultivation of a Culture of Denouncement  89
4. When Projects End: The Fragmentation of Collaboration and the Afterworlds of HIV Prevention  119
5. Stories That Count: The Pathways of Discrimination Stories  145
Afterword  171
Notes  179
References  215
Index  241
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