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.
