Description

Book Synopsis

Collective Care provides an ethnographic account of urban Indigenous life and caregiving practices in the face of Saskatchewan’s HIV epidemic. Based on a five-year study conducted in partnership with AIDS Saskatoon, the book focuses on the contrast between Indigenous values of collective kin-care and non-Indigenous models of intensive maternal care. It explores how women and men negotiate the forces of HIV to render motherhood a site of cultural meaning, personal and collective well-being, and, sometimes, individual and community despair. It also introduces readers to how HIV is Indigenized in western Canada and how all HIV-affected and -infected mothers must negotiate this cultural and racialized terrain.

Featuring in-depth narrative interviews, notes from participant observation in AIDS Saskatoon’s drop-in centre, and a photovoice component, this book offers an accessible account of an engaged anthropologist’s work with a community that is both

Table of Contents
Preface Chapter 1: Beginning Chapter 2: Family Chapter 3: Motherhood Chapter 4: Fatherhood Chapter 5: Loss Chapter 6: Love Chapter 7: Closing References

Collective Care

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    A Paperback by Pamela Downe

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      Publisher: University of Toronto Press
      Publication Date: 1/4/2021 12:01:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781487587635, 978-1487587635
      ISBN10: 1487587635

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Collective Care provides an ethnographic account of urban Indigenous life and caregiving practices in the face of Saskatchewan’s HIV epidemic. Based on a five-year study conducted in partnership with AIDS Saskatoon, the book focuses on the contrast between Indigenous values of collective kin-care and non-Indigenous models of intensive maternal care. It explores how women and men negotiate the forces of HIV to render motherhood a site of cultural meaning, personal and collective well-being, and, sometimes, individual and community despair. It also introduces readers to how HIV is Indigenized in western Canada and how all HIV-affected and -infected mothers must negotiate this cultural and racialized terrain.

      Featuring in-depth narrative interviews, notes from participant observation in AIDS Saskatoon’s drop-in centre, and a photovoice component, this book offers an accessible account of an engaged anthropologist’s work with a community that is both

      Table of Contents
      Preface Chapter 1: Beginning Chapter 2: Family Chapter 3: Motherhood Chapter 4: Fatherhood Chapter 5: Loss Chapter 6: Love Chapter 7: Closing References

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