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Exploring the interplay between HIV and AIDS treatment discourses and subjectivity in South Africa

A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, July, 2017 / This thesis explores the rearticulation of subjectivity in the context of the struggle for
antiretroviral therapy in South Africa, and also in the contemporary era of treatment
accessibility for HIV and AIDS. Two sub-aims are investigated: the first concerns exploring
how, and with what consequences, subjectivity was deployed in the contestations that
characterized the South African ‘AIDS war’; the second concerns inquiring into the
intelligibility of subjectivity in public and everyday consciousness in the post-AIDS war
period. Integrating qualitative analyses with the theoretical lens of an analytics of
governmentality, the data set includes policy-related archival materials, a popular HIV advice
column and interviews with people living with HIV and on antiretroviral therapy.

The thesis brings into sharp focus the adumbration of the right to health with rational
decision-making, dignity and autonomy. Much more than a way of organizing interests,
advocating for the right to treatment - to prevent the transmission of HIV from mother to
child and to slow-down HIV spread - was a strategy of effecting a rationality-cum-affective
transfiguration of a widespread helplessness and despair into self-reliance and hope. At the
level of public and everyday consciousness, self-government on antiretroviral therapy lies at
the intersection of knowledge, self-care and self-management. However, such a subjective
positionality is not adopted unproblematically, or even sustained indefinitely, owing to the
relative weight of other disparate requirements upon oneself from day to day.

What emerged out of the epic battle for antiretroviral therapy, undergirding the prevailing
current public and policy orientation to antiretroviral therapy care, was the combination of an
optimistic rationality and a hopeful affectivity for the potential of fashioning an HIV-positive
subjectivity, contiguously responsibilized and self-responsibilizing. At the experiential level
of living on ARVs, where autonomy is synonymous with self-regulation, the thesis
demonstrates that self-responsibility is also an unpredictable and fluid undertaking of
navigating the affective tumult of hopefulness, uncertainty, sacrifice and tension. / XL2018

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:netd.ac.za/oai:union.ndltd.org:wits/oai:wiredspace.wits.ac.za:10539/24450
Date January 2017
CreatorsNkomo, Nkululeko
Source SetsSouth African National ETD Portal
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis
FormatOnline resource (x, 250 leaves), application/pdf, application/pdf

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