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Radical Pleasure: Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV

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Radical Pleasure: Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV. / Carter, Allison; Anam, Florence; Sanchez, Margarite et al.
In: Archives of Sexual Behavior, Vol. 50, No. 1, 31.01.2021, p. 83-103.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Carter, A, Anam, F, Sanchez, M, Roche, J, Wynne, ST, Stash, J, Webster, K, Nicholson, V, Patterson, S & Kaida, A 2021, 'Radical Pleasure: Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV', Archives of Sexual Behavior, vol. 50, no. 1, pp. 83-103. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-020-01822-8

APA

Carter, A., Anam, F., Sanchez, M., Roche, J., Wynne, S. T., Stash, J., Webster, K., Nicholson, V., Patterson, S., & Kaida, A. (2021). Radical Pleasure: Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 50(1), 83-103. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10508-020-01822-8

Vancouver

Carter A, Anam F, Sanchez M, Roche J, Wynne ST, Stash J et al. Radical Pleasure: Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV. Archives of Sexual Behavior. 2021 Jan 31;50(1):83-103. Epub 2020 Nov 24. doi: 10.1007/s10508-020-01822-8

Author

Carter, Allison ; Anam, Florence ; Sanchez, Margarite et al. / Radical Pleasure : Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV. In: Archives of Sexual Behavior. 2021 ; Vol. 50, No. 1. pp. 83-103.

Bibtex

@article{9be603ae65db4fec96d8a2a03a410177,
title = "Radical Pleasure: Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV",
abstract = "Despite the fact that HIV can be controlled with medication to undetectable levels where it cannot be passed on, stigmatization of women living with HIV persists. Such stigmatization pivots on stereotypes around sex and sexism and has force in women{\textquoteright}s lives. Our aim was to create an inspirational resource for women living with HIV regarding sex, relationships, and sexuality: www.lifeandlovewithhiv.ca (launched in July 2018). This paper describes the development and mixed-method evaluation of our first year and a half activities. We situated our work within a participatory arts-based knowledge translation planning framework and used multiple data sources (Google Analytics, stories and comments on the website, team reflections over multiple meetings) to report on interim outcomes and impacts. In our first 1.5 years, we recruited and mentored 12 women living with HIV from around the world (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Kenya, South Africa, Spain, Nigeria, and the U.S.) to write their own stories, with the support of a mentor/editor, as a way of regaining control of HIV narratives and asserting their right to have pleasurable, fulfilling, and safer sexual lives. Writers published 43 stories about pleasure, orgasm, bodies, identities, trauma, resilience, dating, disclosure, self-love, and motherhood. Our social media community grew to 1600, and our website received approximately 300 visits per month, most by women (70%) and people aged 25–44 years (65%), from more than 50 cities globally, with shifts in use and demographics over time. Qualitative data indicated the power of feminist digital storytelling for opportunity, access, validation, and healing, though not without risks. We offer recommendations to others interested in using arts-based digital methods to advance social equity in sexual health.",
keywords = "Feminism, HIV, Knowledge translation, Relationships, Sexuality, Women",
author = "Allison Carter and Florence Anam and Margarite Sanchez and Juno Roche and Wynne, {S. T.} and Just Stash and Kath Webster and Valerie Nicholson and Sophie Patterson and Angela Kaida",
year = "2021",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1007/s10508-020-01822-8",
language = "English",
volume = "50",
pages = "83--103",
journal = "Archives of Sexual Behavior",
issn = "0004-0002",
publisher = "Springer New York LLC",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Radical Pleasure

T2 - Feminist Digital Storytelling by, with, and for Women Living with HIV

AU - Carter, Allison

AU - Anam, Florence

AU - Sanchez, Margarite

AU - Roche, Juno

AU - Wynne, S. T.

AU - Stash, Just

AU - Webster, Kath

AU - Nicholson, Valerie

AU - Patterson, Sophie

AU - Kaida, Angela

PY - 2021/1/31

Y1 - 2021/1/31

N2 - Despite the fact that HIV can be controlled with medication to undetectable levels where it cannot be passed on, stigmatization of women living with HIV persists. Such stigmatization pivots on stereotypes around sex and sexism and has force in women’s lives. Our aim was to create an inspirational resource for women living with HIV regarding sex, relationships, and sexuality: www.lifeandlovewithhiv.ca (launched in July 2018). This paper describes the development and mixed-method evaluation of our first year and a half activities. We situated our work within a participatory arts-based knowledge translation planning framework and used multiple data sources (Google Analytics, stories and comments on the website, team reflections over multiple meetings) to report on interim outcomes and impacts. In our first 1.5 years, we recruited and mentored 12 women living with HIV from around the world (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Kenya, South Africa, Spain, Nigeria, and the U.S.) to write their own stories, with the support of a mentor/editor, as a way of regaining control of HIV narratives and asserting their right to have pleasurable, fulfilling, and safer sexual lives. Writers published 43 stories about pleasure, orgasm, bodies, identities, trauma, resilience, dating, disclosure, self-love, and motherhood. Our social media community grew to 1600, and our website received approximately 300 visits per month, most by women (70%) and people aged 25–44 years (65%), from more than 50 cities globally, with shifts in use and demographics over time. Qualitative data indicated the power of feminist digital storytelling for opportunity, access, validation, and healing, though not without risks. We offer recommendations to others interested in using arts-based digital methods to advance social equity in sexual health.

AB - Despite the fact that HIV can be controlled with medication to undetectable levels where it cannot be passed on, stigmatization of women living with HIV persists. Such stigmatization pivots on stereotypes around sex and sexism and has force in women’s lives. Our aim was to create an inspirational resource for women living with HIV regarding sex, relationships, and sexuality: www.lifeandlovewithhiv.ca (launched in July 2018). This paper describes the development and mixed-method evaluation of our first year and a half activities. We situated our work within a participatory arts-based knowledge translation planning framework and used multiple data sources (Google Analytics, stories and comments on the website, team reflections over multiple meetings) to report on interim outcomes and impacts. In our first 1.5 years, we recruited and mentored 12 women living with HIV from around the world (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Kenya, South Africa, Spain, Nigeria, and the U.S.) to write their own stories, with the support of a mentor/editor, as a way of regaining control of HIV narratives and asserting their right to have pleasurable, fulfilling, and safer sexual lives. Writers published 43 stories about pleasure, orgasm, bodies, identities, trauma, resilience, dating, disclosure, self-love, and motherhood. Our social media community grew to 1600, and our website received approximately 300 visits per month, most by women (70%) and people aged 25–44 years (65%), from more than 50 cities globally, with shifts in use and demographics over time. Qualitative data indicated the power of feminist digital storytelling for opportunity, access, validation, and healing, though not without risks. We offer recommendations to others interested in using arts-based digital methods to advance social equity in sexual health.

KW - Feminism

KW - HIV

KW - Knowledge translation

KW - Relationships

KW - Sexuality

KW - Women

U2 - 10.1007/s10508-020-01822-8

DO - 10.1007/s10508-020-01822-8

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 33231828

AN - SCOPUS:85096492944

VL - 50

SP - 83

EP - 103

JO - Archives of Sexual Behavior

JF - Archives of Sexual Behavior

SN - 0004-0002

IS - 1

ER -