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Towards A Living Women’s History of HIV/AIDS: Can History Make You Healthy?

Towards A Living Women’s History of HIV/AIDS: Can History Make You Healthy? Online

Towards A Living Women’s History of HIV/AIDS: Can History Make You Healthy?

Jennifer Brier, PhD

Professor of Gender & Women’s Studies and History

University of Illinois at Chicago

 

What can we learn from putting women at the center of how we understand the HIV/AIDS epidemic in the United States? How can women’s lived experiences shape what it means to talk about health and wellness in the midst of structural inequality and violence? In a talk that shares excerpts from dozens of oral histories collected with women living with HIV/AIDS and featured on the website, www.stillsurviving.net, Brier will explore how attention to women’s history that is always defined by race and class, can help us see how people living with HIV/AIDS have survived and thrived over the course of the last forty years and also imagine ways to share that history with a wide range of audiences.

About Dr. Brier

Jennifer Brier’s research and teaching are largely focused on exploring the historical intersections of gender, race, and sexuality. Her first book, Infectious Ideas: U.S. Political Response to the AIDS Crisis (University of North Carolina Press, 2009) argues that AIDS provides the perfect lens through which to see the complex social and political history of the 1980s and 1990s. She substantiates this argument by detailing how activists, service providers, philanthropists, and the federal government responded to AIDS in the first two decades of the AIDS epidemic. She places the history of a successful yet complex and contentious social movement organized to deal with the AIDS epidemic in conversation with a more traditional political history of how the state dealt with this public health crisis. Finally, she links the local to the global by connecting the development of domestic AIDS policy and activism to global AIDS policy and activism.

Brier is also actively engaged in producing public history. She co-curated the award-winning exhibition, "Out in Chicago," on LGBT history in Chicago at the Chicago History Museum as well as Surviving and Thriving: AIDS, Politics and Culture, a traveling exhibition for the National Library of Medicine. Brier is currently leading a team of UIC faculty, students and staff to build a community-curated mobile gallery called History Moves that will provide a space for Chicago-based community organizers and activists to share their histories with a wide audience.  The interdisciplinary project has received funding for the National Endowment for the Arts, UIC’s Institute for Policy and Civic Engagement (IPCE), Institute for Research on Race and Public Policy (IRRPP), and the Chancellor’s Multidisciplinary Discovery Award.

 


 

UCSF welcomes all participants to our events. If you need a reasonable accommodation to participate in this event because of a disability, please contact Sean Purcell at sean.purcell@ucsf.edu as soon as possible.

Date:
Monday, Jun 16 2025
Time:
12:00pm - 1:30pm
Time Zone:
Pacific Time - US & Canada (change)
Online:
This is an online event. Event URL will be sent via registration email.
Audience:
  Faculty     Local community     Postdocs     Staff     Students  
Categories:
  Archives and Special Collections     Special Event  

Registration is required. There are 69 seats available.

Event Organizer

Profile photo of Sean Purcell
Sean Purcell