1,948
Views
7
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

Strategies of silence in an age of transparency: Navigating HIV and visibility in Aceh, Indonesia

ORCID Icon

References

  • Al-Mohammad, Hayder. 2015. “Never Quite Given: Calling Into Question the Relation between Person and World in Postinvastion Iraq.” In Living and Dying in the Contemporary World: A Compendium, edited by Veena Das and Clara Han, 463–474. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Birchok, Daniel A. 2019. “Teungku Sum’s Dilemma: Ethical Time, Reflexivity, and the Islamic Everyday.” Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 9 (2): 269–283.
  • Black, Steven P. 2015. “The Morality of Performance: HIV Disclosure in Speech and Song in South Africa.” Ethos 43 (3): 247–266.
  • Boellstorff, Tom. 2009. “Nuri’s Testimony: HIV/AIDS in Indonesia and Bare Knowledge.” American Ethnologist 36 (2): 351–363.
  • Bubandt, Nils. 2008. “Rumors, Pamphlets and the Politics of Paranoia in Indonesia.” The Journal of Asian Studies 67 (3): 789–817.
  • Butt, Leslie. 2011. “Can You Keep a Secret? Pretenses of Confidentiality in HIV/AIDS Counseling and Treatment in Eastern Indonesia.” Medical Anthropology 30: 319–338.
  • Das, Veena. 2007. Life and Words: Violence and the Descent Into the Ordinary. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Dlamini-Simelane, Thandeka T. T., and Eileen Moyer. 2017. “‘Lost to Follow Up’: Rethinking Delayed and Interrupted HIV Treatment Among Married Swazi Women.” Health Policy and Planning 32 (2): 248–256.
  • Dragojlovic, Ana. 2020. “Caring for the Un-Speakable: Coercive Pedagogies, Shame, and the Structural Violence Continuum in Indisch Intergenerational Memory Work.” In Gender, Violence and Power in Indonesia: Across Time and Space, edited by Katharine McGregor, Ana Dragojlovic, and Hannah Loney, 143–162. London: Routledge.
  • Gammeltoft, Tine. 2016. “Silence as a Response to Everyday Violence: Understanding Domination and Distress Through the Lens of Fantasy.” Ethos 44 (4): 427–447.
  • Good, Byron J. 2012. “Phenomenology, Psychoanalysis, and Subjectivity in Java.” Ethos 40 (1): 24–36.
  • Good, Byron J. 2015. “Haunted by Aceh: Specters of Violence in Post-Suharto Indonesia.” In Genocide and Mass Violence: Memory, Symptom and Recovery, edited by Devon E. Hinton, and Alexander L. Hinton, 58–82. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Good, Byron J. 2019. “Hauntology: Theorizing the Spectral in Psychological Anthropology.” Ethos 47 (4): 411–426.
  • Good, Byron J., and Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good. 1994. “In the Subjunctive Mode: Epilepsy Narratives in Turkey.” Social Science and Medicine 38 (6): 835–842.
  • Good, Byron J., Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good, Sandra Teresa Hyde, and Sarah Pinto. 2008. “Postcolonial Disorders: Reflections on Subjectivity in the Contemporary World.” In Postcolonial Disorders, edited by Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good, Sandra Teresa Hyde, Sarah Pinto, and Byron J. Good, 1–40. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Han, Clara. 2012. Life in Debt: Times of Care and Violence in Neoliberal Chile. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Hardon, Anita, and Deborah Posel. 2012. “Secrecy as Embodied Practice: Beyond the Confessional Imperative.” Culture, Health and Sexuality 14 (S1): S1–S13.
  • Hegarty, Benjamin. 2018. “Under the Lights, Onto the Stage: Becoming Waria Through National Glamour in New Order Indonesia.” TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 5 (3): 355–377.
  • Herriman, Nicholas. 2015. “‘Hard-Copy Rumours’: Print Media and Rumour in Indonesia.” Southeast Asia Research 23 (1): 45–60.
  • Hidayana, Irwan M., and Brigitte Tenni. 2015. “Negotiating Risk: Indonesian Couples Navigating Marital Relationships, Reproduction and HIV.” In Sex and Sexualities in Contemporary Indonesia: Sexual Politics, Health, Diversity and Representations, edited by Linda Rae Bennett, and Sharyn Graham Davies, 91–108. London: Routledge.
  • Human Rights Watch. 2018. ‘Scared in Public and Now No Privacy’: Human Rights and Public Health Impacts of Indonesia’s Anti-LGBT Moral Panic. Jakarta: Human Rights Watch. https://www.hrw.org/report/2018/07/01/scared-public-and-now-no-privacy/human-rights-and-public-health-impacts-indonesias.
  • Idria, Reza. 2019. “Letters to Maop: Living with a Ghost as Therapeutic Experience.” Ethos 47 (4): 465–479.
  • Jackson, Michael. 2002. The Politics of Storytelling: Violence, Transgression, and Intersubjectivity. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.
  • Januraga, P. P., J. Reekie, T. Mulyani, B. W. Lestari, S. Iskandar, R. Wisaksana, et al. 2018. “The Cascade of HIV Care Among Key Populations in Indonesia: A Prospective Cohort Study.” The Lancet. Hiv 3018 (18): 1–9.
  • Kidron, Carol A. 2009. “Toward an Ethnography of Silence.” Current Anthropology 50 (1): 5–27.
  • Kloos, David. 2018. Becoming Better Muslims: Religious Authority and Ethical Improvement in Aceh, Indonesia. Princeton: Princeton University Press.
  • Kroeger, Karen A. 2003. “AIDS Rumors, Imaginary Enemies, and the Body Politic in Indonesia.” American Ethnologist 30 (2): 243–257.
  • Leksana, Grace. 2019. “Review Essay: Remembering the Indonesian Genocide, 53 Years Later.” Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 175: 67–79.
  • Li, Tania Murray. 2007. The Will to Improve: Governmentality, Development, and the Practice of Politics. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
  • Lindquist, Johan. 2008. The Anxieties of Mobility: Migration and Tourism in the Indonesian Borderlands. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i press.
  • Mattingly, Cheryl. 1998. Healing Dramas and Clinical Plots: The Narrative Structure of Experience. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
  • Moyer, Eileen. 2012. “Faidha Gani? What is the Point: HIV and the Logics of Non-Disclosure Among Young Activists in Zanzibar.” Culture, Health and Sexuality 14 (S1): S67–S79.
  • Moyer, Eileen, and Anita Hardon. 2014. “A Disease Unlike Any Other? Why HIV Remains Exceptional in the Age of Treatment.” Medical Anthropology 33: 263–269.
  • Nanwani, Sandeep, and Clara Siagian. 2017. “Falling Through the Cracks.” Inside Indonesia http://www.insideindonesia.org/falling-through-the-cracks.
  • Pipyrou, Stavroula. Forthcoming. “Displaced Children and the Violence of Humanitarianism in Cold War Italy.” Anthropological Quarterly.
  • Pisani, Elizabeth, Maarten O. Kok, and Kharisma Nugroho. 2017. “Indonesia’s Road to Universal Health Coverage: A Political Journey.” Health Policy and Planning 32 (2): 267–276.
  • Rhine, Kathryn. 2014. “HIV, Embodied Secrets and Intimate Labour in Northern Nigeria.” Ethnos 79 (5): 699–718.
  • Samuels, Annemarie. 2016. “Seeing AIDS in Aceh: Sexual Moralities and the Politics of (In)Visibility in Post-Reconstruction Times.” Indonesia 101: 103–120.
  • Samuels, Annemarie. 2019a. After the Tsunami: Disaster Narratives and the Remaking of Everyday Life in Aceh. Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press.
  • Samuels, Annemarie. 2019b. “Narrative Navigation: HIV and (Good) Care in Aceh, Indonesia.” Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 43 (1): 116–133.
  • Samuels, Annemarie. 2020. “Gendered Violence, Gendered Care: Nonintervention, Silence Work and the Politics of HIV in Aceh.” In Gender, Violence and Power in Indonesia: Across Time and Space, edited by Katharine McGregor, Ana Dragojlovic, and Hannah Loney, 181–196. London: Routledge.
  • Scherz, China. 2014. Having People, Having Heart: Charity, Sustainable Development, and Problems of Dependence in Central Uganda. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  • Shohet, Merav. 2017. “Troubling Love: Gender, Class, and Sideshadowing the ‘Happy Family’ in Vietnam.” Ethos 45 (4): 555–576.
  • Shohet, Merav. 2018a. “Beyond the Clinic: Eluding a Medical Diagnosis of Anorexia Through Narrative.” Transcultural Psychiatry 55 (4): 495–515.
  • Shohet, Merav. 2018b. “Two Deaths and A Funeral: Ritual Inscriptions’ Affordances for Mourning and Moral Personhood in Vietnam.” American Ethnologist 45 (1): 60–73.
  • Shohet, Merav. Forthcoming. Silence and Sacrifice: Family Stories of Care and the Limits of Love in Vietnam. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Siegel, James T. 1998. A New Criminal Type in Jakarta: Counter-Revolution Today. Durham: Duke University Press.
  • Spyer, Patricia. 2002. “Fire Without Smoke and Other Phantom’s of Ambon’s Violence: Media Effects, Agency and the Work of Imagination.” Indonesia 74 (2): 21–36.
  • Steedly, Mary M. 2013. “Transparency and Apparition: Media Ghosts of Post-New Order Indonesia.” In Images That Move, edited by Patricia Spyer, and Mary M. Steedly, 257–294. Santa Fe: School for Advanced Research Press.
  • Strassler, Karen. 2004. “Gendered Visibilities and the Dream of Transparency: The Chinese-Indonesian Rape Debate in Post-Suharto Indonesia.” Gender & History 16 (3): 689–725.
  • Thajib, Ferdiansyah. 2018. “The Making and Breaking of Indonesian Muslim Queer Safe Spaces.” Borderlands e-journal 17 (1). http://www.borderlands.net.au/vol17no1_2018/thajib_indonesian.pdf.
  • Throop, Jason C. 2010. Suffering and Sentiment: Exploring the Vicissitudes of Experience and Pain in Yap. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  • Tidey, Sylvia. 2013. “Corruption and Adherence to Rules in the Construction Sector: Reading the Bidding Books.” American Anthropologist 115 (2): 188–202.
  • Tidey, Sylvia. 2019. “Requiem for a Waria: Piety and the Political Potentiality of Ironic Experience.” Social Analysis 63 (1): 83–102.
  • UNAIDS-Lancet Commission. 2015. “Defeating AIDS – Advancing Global Health.” The Lancet 386: 171–218.
  • Van Tilburg, Mariette. 1998. “Interviews of the Unspoken: Incompatible Initiations in Senegal Fieldwork.” Anthropology and Humanism 23 (2): 177–189.
  • Vigh, Henrik. 2009. “Motion Squared: A Second Look at the Concept of Social Navigation.” Anthropological Theory 9 (4): 419–438.
  • Weller, Robert. 2017. “Salvaging Silence: Exile, Death, and the Anthropology of the Unknowable.” Anthropology of this Century 19 [Online publication].
  • Wikan, Unni. 1992. “Beyond the Words: The Power of Resonance.” American Ethnologist 19 (3): 460–482.