Once Upon a Virus: AIDS Legends and Vernacular Risk Perception
Abstract
Once Upon a Virus explores how contemporary, or ""urban,"" legends are indicators of culturally complex attitudes toward health and illness. Tracing the rich tradition of AIDS legends in relation to current scholarship on belief, Diane Goldstein shows how such stories not only articulate widespread perceptions of risk, health care, and health policy, they also influence official and scientific approaches to the disease and its management. Notions that appear in narratives of who gets AIDS, how and why, are indicators of broad issues involving health beliefs, concerns, and needs.
Webshop link
http://www.usu.edu/usupress/bo ...ISBN
9780874215878Publisher website
http://digitalcommons.usu.eduPublication date and place
2004Classification
Public health and preventive medicine