American sociologist and historian (born 1956)
Cindy Patton (born February 12, 1956) is an American sociologist and historian specializing in the history of the AIDS epidemic. A former faculty member at Temple University and Emory University,[1] she currently teaches at Simon Fraser University, where she held the Canada Research Chair in Community, Culture, and Health from 2003 to 2014.[2] Her work has appeared in Criticism, the Feminist Review, and the International Review of Qualitative Research,[3] and she co-edited a special edition of Cultural Studies on French sociologist Pierre Bourdieu.[4]
Patton is a graduate of Appalachian State University, Harvard University, and the University of Massachusetts.[2] She received the Stonewall Book Award in 1986 for her book Sex and Germs: The Politics of AIDS,[5] and was nominated for a Lambda Literary Award in 1991 for Inventing AIDS.[6]
Bibliography
- Sex and Germs: The Politics of AIDS (1985)
- Making It: A Woman's Guide to Sex in the Age of AIDS (1987) (with Janis Kelly)
- Inventing AIDS (1990)
- Women and AIDS (1993)
- Last Served?: Gendering the HIV Pandemic (1994)
- Fatal Advice: How Safe-Sex Education Went Wrong (1996)
- Cinematic Identity: Anatomy of a Problem Film (1997)
- Queer Diasporas (2000) (as editor with Benigno Sánchez-Eppler)
- Globalizing AIDS (2002)
- Cinematic Identity: Anatomy of a Problem Film (2007)
- Global Science/Women's Health (2008) (as editor with Helen Loshny)
- Rebirth of the Clinic: Places and Agents in Contemporary Health Care (2010) (as editor)
- L.A. Plays Itself / Boys In The Sand : A Queer Film Classic (Queer Film Classics) (2014)
See also
References
|
---|
International | |
---|
National | |
---|
Artists | |
---|
Other | |
---|