Living In Death’s Shadow: Personal Stories Of The AIDS Epidemic
Inner-city Sydney was the
epicentre of gay life in the Southern hemisphere in the
1970s and early 1980s, as gay men moved from across
Australasia to find social freedom in the city’s vibrant
community networks. However when HIV and AIDS devastated the
community, they grieved, suffered, and survived in ways that
have often been left out of the historical record, until
now. A
new book by University of Auckland historian Dr Cheryl Ware
looks at the intimate lives and memories of HIV-positive gay
men in Sydney between 1982 and
1996.
HIV Survivors in Sydney, Memories of the
Epidemic (Palgrave MacMillan, 2019) by Dr Cheryl Ware
looks at the intimate lives and memories of HIV-positive gay
men in Sydney. It focuses on the critical years between 1982
and 1996, when HIV went from being a terrifying unidentified
disease to a chronic condition that could be managed with
antiretroviral medication.
Using oral histories
and archival research, Dr Ware explores how HIV-positive gay
men navigated issues like disclosure, health, sex, grief,
death and survival, how they dealt with the virus both
within and outside of support networks and how they remember
these experiences nearly three decades
later.
Her interest in the field started
with a personal experience of having a family friend whose
partner died as a result of HIV in 1999. She interviewed the
family friend in 2010
“It brought up a lot of
conversations about having to deal with the body and the
rituals around death, and how many men’s partners and
friends were not welcome among families at conventional
funerals, so they had to create their own rituals,” she
says.
For her book, Dr Ware conducted interviews
with 25 gay men who were diagnosed with HIV before the
introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)
in 1996. She says all the men who participated in her study
were diagnosed when it was considered a death
sentence.
“They had all witnessed others’
health deteriorate and many had internalised ideas that they
would succumb to the same severe physical effects of HIV and
AIDS-related conditions that they had seen countless others
endure.”
Between 1982 and 1996, over 16000
Australians were diagnosed with HIV and about 80 percent
were gay men.
“Several of the issues they
described, especially regarding participating in trials for
various antiretroviral medications and planning their own
funerals, were strongly influenced by what many perceived as
the reality that they would die untimely and protracted
deaths,” she says.
A key focus of the book is
the way in which the threat of the virus galvanised gay
activists to become part of the response to the epidemic, as
they mobilised to provide practical, emotional and economic
support.
“They established a proactive and
effective system of peer-based preventative education that
some historians have labelled one of the best in the
world,” says Dr Ware. “Such histories are incredibly
valuable as they pay due respect to the scores of activists
who dedicated themselves to establishing an exceptional
response to a devastating situation.”
She says
the huge stigma associated with the illness is also a common
theme.
“Several of the men in the study challenged the
stigma by appearing in the media as the ‘face of HIV,’
lobbied doctors to collaborate with patients under a
‘consult, don’t prescribe’ policy, and transformed
Australia’s drug approval process to improve access to
potentially lifesaving medication.”
The scale
and influence of existing histories that trace activists’
public achievements appear to have helped some participants
make sense of the tragedy.
Other interviewees were not
involved in activism and felt disconnected from Sydney’s
gay community.
“These men did not always have
access to support networks, yet many struggled to articulate
their memories of isolation and exclusion. They expressed
particular difficulty talking about times when highly
publicised HIV-related discrimination and vilification,
coupled with a lack of support, meant they felt compelled to
conceal their positive status.”
By emphasising
the value of their individual accounts, Dr Ware believes the
book offers these men a unique forum to narrate their life
stories in ways that both aligns with, and departs from,
existing knowledge of how HIV and AIDS impacted Sydney’s
gay community.
It is available at UBIQ stores
and
online.