Item Details
HIV/AIDS [videorecording]: Discrimination, Stigma and Shame
produced by University Relations, Television News Office, University of Virginia
- Format
- Video; VHS
- Summary
- Dr. Gayle, Director of the National Center for HIV, STD, and TB Prevention of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, explains how racism, stigma, shame, and marginalization have played a unique role in shaping societal and individual responses to the HIV/AIDs epidemic. She uses the situations of African Americans in the United States and South Africans under aparteid as case studies, giving the historical background and current conditions for each.
- Performers
- Lecturer: Helene D. Gayle.
- Release Date
- 2001
- Run Time
- 31 min.
- Language
- English
- Notes
- Medical center hour lecture given in Jordan Hall Auditorium, University of Virginia, January 31, 2001. The lecture was sponsored by Humanities in Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Virginia. This version was edited to fit the program format of the television presentation first aired March 8, 2001.
- Series
- UVA Newsmakers
- Medical Center Hour
- Series Statement
- Medical center hour ; 1/31/01
- Credits
- Editors: Rob Smith, Matt Upcapher, Kent C. Williamson.
- Published
- [Charlottesville, Va.] : The Office, 2001.
- Description
- 1 videocassette (31 min.) : sd., col. ; 1/2 in.
- VHS format [NTSC]
- Technical Details
-
- Access in Virgo Classic
- Staff View
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Availability
Library | Location | Map | Availability | Call Number |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ivy | By Request | N/A | Available |
VIDEO .VHS11656 |