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Fluid Labor and Blood Money: The Economy of HIV/AIDS in Rural Central China
Author(s) -
Jing SHAO
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
cultural anthropology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.669
H-Index - 75
eISSN - 1548-1360
pISSN - 0886-7356
DOI - 10.1525/can.2006.21.4.535
Subject(s) - china , ideology , consumption (sociology) , political science , political economy , sociology , development economics , economic growth , economics , social science , politics , law
This ethnographically grounded “epidemiology” implicates China's liberalized economy in the HIV epidemic among commercial plasma donors in rural central China. It uncovers the pathological confluence of spheres of economic circulations that have created the conditions for value to be extracted not through labor but from human plasma harvested from agricultural producers. This critique has emerged out of, and in turn informed, efforts to forestall the secondary epidemic of AIDS among donors already infected by HIV. The specific history of the production and consumption of blood products in China shows how biotechnology broadly defined can be powerfully refracted by local configurations of economy, technology, and social relations. The ideologically sustained second‐order “reality” of benevolent economic imperatives needs to be brought into the critical focus of cultural anthropology.

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