Butch Nightingale?: lesbians and AIDS work in Nova Scotia
LE3 .A278 1998
1998
Auger, Jeanette
Acadia University
Master of Arts
Masters
Sociology
The entry point for this thesis is the development of a lesbian feminist critique of AIDS work. The critique hinges on the notion that lesbians who chose to do AIDS work are acting like nurses, taking on caring roles, as women tend to do. Such a critique of lesbians' involvement in the AIDS epidemic is first explored, then used to spur an inquiry into the social relations surrounding lesbians and AIDS work, and finally shown to have theoretical shortcomings. The literature is surveyed providing a context within which the six informants from Nova Scotia are used to discover some of the ways that lesbians become involved in AIDS work. The analysis suggests that lesbians' participation in responding to AIDS arises through community affiliations not limited to the lesbian identity. As a theoretical approach arising from, and somewhat limited to, the sociology of gender and sexuality, the lesbian feminist critique of AIDS work is demonstrated to lack the ability to account for the complex identities of the six lesbians in this thesis.
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https://scholar.acadiau.ca/islandora/object/theses:2834