Spatializing HIV: Putting Queer (men) in its place via social marketing

Dialogues Health. 2024 Jan 21:4:100169. doi: 10.1016/j.dialog.2024.100169. eCollection 2024 Jun.

Abstract

The current study is concerned with how HIV is spatialized, or emplaced in everyday life, and therefore how prevention, Queer identity, and the virus itself are given meaning. Employing a transdisciplinary methodology based in Critical Discourse Studies and critical human geography, this study provides a geosemiotic analysis of an HIV prevention social marketing effort called the Little Prick campaign. Findings showed that space was constructed through multiple competing dynamics across professionals and citizens, as well as amidst contested notions of risk and branding in the epidemic. The analysis illuminates the discursive relationship amongst Queer, HIV, and prevention. Equally, this study counters the biased notion that "prevention fatigue" in high-risk populations hampers professional labor by, instead, exposing a semiotic fatigue in the HIV epidemic and prevention efforts.

Keywords: Gay; Geosemiotics; HIV; Queer; Social Semiotics; Social marketing; Space and place.