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This article from The Guardian features six diverse narratives of individuals living with HIV, highlighting the evolution of the HIV/AIDS experience over the past 30 years in Britain. For example, Jonathan, diagnosed during the early epidemic in the 1980s, reflects on living with HIV for over half of his life, explaining how he managed without medication until 1996 and has come to embrace life with HIV through activism. Another example is Jo, diagnosed at 60, who discusses how she navigated the shock of her diagnosis and the perceptions associated with being an older woman with HIV. She’s open about her diagnosis because she wants to change perceptions about people living with HIV.
This article offers students an opportunity to reflect on diverse experiences with the same illness, and brings up topics such as stigma, activism, and media representation of illness and how these change through time.
Access
- Link: https://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/mar/22/living-with-hiv-30-years-on
Details
Language: English
Type of Story: Newspaper or Magazine and Brief story
Medium: written
Contributed by: Emily Larabee
Citation:
Tucker, E. (n.d.). Living with HIV: six very different stories. The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/society/2015/mar/22/living-with-hiv-30-years-on