HOME
hiv911
Search the database online or call the HIV911 helpline

Search ARTICLES/RESOURCES
By: Title??Title & Body?? And/Or: Or??And?? eg. HIV/AIDS, nutrition


HIVAN?s community Newsletter
HIVAN?s sectoral networking brief
Forum Reports

Events Diary
Funding Opportunities
HEART

Site designed and maintained by Immedia

Printer-friendly version

Mortality and the ethics of qualitative rural research research in a context of HIV/AIDS

Patti Henderson. HIVAN Senior Researcher & Anthropologist.
The seminar was based on a recently published article that used the story of one man suffering from AIDS to explore the ethical relationship between researchers and an interlocutor over a two-year period in Okhahlamba. Okhahlamba is a remote, rural Zulu-speaking region in South Africa?’s Drakensberg. Drawing on the philosophical work of Emmanuel Levinas and Alphonso Lingus, the paper suggests the importance of not pre-empting too quick an understanding of illness and suffering, and of allowing space for the ill to set the pace and the content of the relationship between researchers and those with whom they work. Levinas?’ insistence on solicitude and responsibility in the presence of the vulnerability of the Other is linked to the ways that researchers, in addition to being of practical assistance to an ill man, learnt through mutual interaction how to listen, how to remain silent, and how to suspend a particular approach when surprised by their interlocutor. The case study is placed within a context of widespread mourning and death.

Was this article helpful to you? ?100%?????0%

Back

Download documents
henderson revision forum

Related Articles
Hivan Rapportage


? Centre for HIV/AIDS Networking 2002 - 2005. All rights reserved. No reproduction, distribution, dissemination or replication of the contents hereof may be undertaken under any circumstances without the express prior written consent of HIVAN. All users acknowledge that they have read and understood our Terms Of Use. Contact Us by clicking here or reach the Webmaster by clicking here.

Please view this site with the latest versions of Explorer or Netscape