The first book to tell the shocking story of the AIDS crisis in Soviet Russia.
Throughout the 1980s, as the world was grappling with the escalating crisis of AIDS, Soviet Russia continued to deny there was a problem. Arguing that the disease was limited to foreigners and ‘immoral’ groups, the government failed to take meaningful action, long past the point other countries had begun to recognise the full scale of the threat.
In this ground-breaking book, Rustam Alexander tells the story of AIDS in Soviet Russia. Fixated on disinformation, censorship and the persecution of marginalised communities, the Soviet authorities wasted precious time, allowing the epidemic to strike at the very heart of the nation: its children. Yet, despite the government’s failure, a number of brave journalists, doctors and nascent gay groups decided to take matters into their own hands and engage in full-fledged AIDS activism.
Tracing the political and social response to AIDS in the final years of the Soviet era, Alexander sheds light on the devastating consequences of government inaction. He draws on personal stories, media reports and archival materials to provide a riveting account of the Russian people’s fight against AIDS amid the tumultuous transformations of Gorbachev’s perestroika. -- .
Introduction
Part I: Deception
Prologue
1 A mysterious disease, 1981–85
2 VII World Youth Festival and AIDS, June–August 1985
3 Disinformation campaign takes off, Autumn 1985
4 Panic and fear in Soviet society, November 1985
5 Disinformation campaign continues, 1986
6 'So what is AIDS?', 1987
Part II: Despair
7 'It’s absolutely certain that the disease will reach us...', Moscow, 1987
8 'Are you crazy? AIDS?!', Moscow 1987
9 'Risk group': homosexuals, prostitutes and drug addicts, 1987
10 AIDS victims: modern pariahs, 1987–89
Part III: Unlikely activism
11 The first victims, September–December 1988
12 A deadly shortage of condoms and syringes, 1988
13 A rude awakening and unlikely AIDS activism, 1988–89
14 [the title TBC], 1990
15 [the title TBC], 1991
Epilogue: from 1991 to the present day
Index -- .
Height:
Width:
Spine:
Weight:0.00