DiscoverEurope Japan Research Centre PodcastsAnd I Dance with Somebody: HIV/AIDS Activism, Queer Politics and Performance in 1990s Japan
And I Dance with Somebody: HIV/AIDS Activism, Queer Politics and Performance in 1990s Japan

And I Dance with Somebody: HIV/AIDS Activism, Queer Politics and Performance in 1990s Japan

Update: 2020-12-15
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[Recorded 9th December 2020] Recent years have seen an increased focus on global cultural histories of HIV/AIDS of the 1980s and 1990s. However these have tended to focus on the transnational circulation of cultural products, activist networks and people across the North Atlantic, and specifically in the Anglophone world. In this talk marking World AIDS Day, I make some preliminary claims for a greater significance of Japan in a global history of HIV/AIDS of the 1990s. I focus on the events surrounding the first World AIDS Conference held outside Europe and North America (in Yokohama in 1994) and the transnational movements of theatre productions, performance, visual arts and other cultural products in and out of Japan around this time period. Mark Pendleton is Senior Lecturer in Japanese Studies in the School of East Asian Studies at University of Sheffield. He is an editor of the Routledge Companion to Gender and Japanese Culture and has published numerous chapters and articles in journals like Japan Forum and Japanese Studies.
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And I Dance with Somebody: HIV/AIDS Activism, Queer Politics and Performance in 1990s Japan

And I Dance with Somebody: HIV/AIDS Activism, Queer Politics and Performance in 1990s Japan

Mark Pendleton, Senior Lecturer, University of Sheffield