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University of California Press

About the Book

The convergence of the fourth decade of the HIV/AIDS pandemic, the COVID-19 outbreak, and landmark struggles for reproductive justice has illuminated interconnected health inequities faced by Black women globally. In Ill Erotics, the first book-length ethnographic study to focus on HIV-positive Black girls and women in the Anglophone Caribbean, Jallicia Jolly shows how women's everyday lives contrast with widely circulated "end of AIDS" narratives that prioritize individualism, self-help, and self-sufficiency. The book chronicles the politics of HIV care and self-making in young Black women's everyday experiences with illness, reproductive violence, and inequality as they navigate the contradictory interventions of the state, biomedicine, humanitarianism, and HIV/AIDS organizations. Jolly makes the compelling argument that young women's grassroots practice of care enables a Black feminist infrastructure that centers interdependence, affective connections, and political mobilization while repurposing discourses of shame, isolation, and contagion.

About the Author

Jallicia Jolly is Assistant Professor of Black Studies and American Studies at Amherst College. She is founder and director of the Black Feminist Reproductive Justice, Equity & HIV/AIDS Activism (BREHA) Collective, an interdisciplinary medical humanities lab.