Abstract
In this chapter we set out a theoretical framework to consider the relational complexity of serodiscordance and to critique the biomedical deployment of serodiscordance and its socio-legal effects. Specifically, we draw on the relational approach to bodies, technology and place articulated in Karen Barad’s agential realism. This analysis will consider the practice and narratives of healthcare providers in a specialist clinic and the narratives of patients who were, or had been, in (assumed) serodiscordant relationships. The data this chapter is premised on were collected during a broader qualitative investigation of an HIV specialist antenatal clinic in London, which explored the multifarious requirements of the successful prevention of mother-to-child (vertical) transmission of HIV. We argue that contrary to its deployment within biomedicine, serodiscordance is an intricate entanglement of virus, body and power. We demonstrate that serodiscordance emerges in the clinic not only as a material-discursive phenomenon, but a phenomenon that is multiple. We explore three aspects of serodiscordance as a phenomenal multiplicity, which we have termed: violent, temporal and diasporic. In conclusion we consider how HIV as a multiplicity unsettles the biomedical notion of serodiscordance.
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Notes
- 1.
“The real” is a concept we have taken from feminist theory in which it is used to articulate materiality as it appears (and is imagined) to exist prior to discourse (see for instance Butler 1994). The concept is at the heart of Karen Barad’s agential real ism and has been adopted by Marsha Rosengarten (2009).
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van der Zaag, AC., McKnight, U. (2017). Exploring the Relational Complexity of Serodiscordance: Negotiating Violence, Temporality and Diaspora. In: Persson, A., Hughes, S. (eds) Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Couples with Mixed HIV Status: Beyond Positive/Negative. Social Aspects of HIV, vol 2. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-42725-6_7
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