Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise

This article revisits activist ethnographer George W. Smith’s intellectual and political legacy, with a focus on his engagement with and conception of “life work.” In the context of the AIDS crisis in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Smith contributed to reframing the way in which AIDS was problemati...

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Main Authors: Chris Hurl, Janna Klostermann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Brock University 2020-02-01
Series:Studies in Social Justice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/SSJ/article/view/1932
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spelling doaj-4a365b92a4b94bd6ad4e8257e475f8232020-11-25T03:02:57ZengBrock UniversityStudies in Social Justice1911-47882020-02-0113226228210.26522/ssj.v13i2.19321932Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living OtherwiseChris HurlJanna KlostermannThis article revisits activist ethnographer George W. Smith’s intellectual and political legacy, with a focus on his engagement with and conception of “life work.” In the context of the AIDS crisis in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Smith contributed to reframing the way in which AIDS was problematized and confronted. Rather than treating people living with HIV/AIDS as “disease vectors” to be isolated from the general population, as had been the case under the prevailing public health regime, he started his research and organizing from the standpoint of people living with HIV/AIDS – investigating the everyday work that they did in accessing the services that they needed in order to survive. Drawing from archival research, activist interviews and his published works, this article traces how Smith deployed the concept of life work in his research as part of the “Hooking Up” Project, in his public writing in the gay and lesbian press, and in his organizing with AIDS ACTION NOW! in Toronto. Beyond the reproductive labour of individuals in accessing particular politico-administrative regimes, which Smith focused on in his research, we explore how life work can be theorized more broadly to include collective efforts to confront social, biomedical and institutional barriers to living. Hence, in considering Smith’s AIDS activism, we argue that his theorizing and political organizing, taken together, should themselves be seen as forms of life work.https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/SSJ/article/view/1932activismknowledgelife workpolitical activist ethnographysociology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chris Hurl
Janna Klostermann
spellingShingle Chris Hurl
Janna Klostermann
Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise
Studies in Social Justice
activism
knowledge
life work
political activist ethnography
sociology
author_facet Chris Hurl
Janna Klostermann
author_sort Chris Hurl
title Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise
title_short Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise
title_full Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise
title_fullStr Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise
title_full_unstemmed Remembering George W. Smith’s “Life Work”: From Politico-Administrative Regimes to Living Otherwise
title_sort remembering george w. smith’s “life work”: from politico-administrative regimes to living otherwise
publisher Brock University
series Studies in Social Justice
issn 1911-4788
publishDate 2020-02-01
description This article revisits activist ethnographer George W. Smith’s intellectual and political legacy, with a focus on his engagement with and conception of “life work.” In the context of the AIDS crisis in the late 1980s and early 1990s, Smith contributed to reframing the way in which AIDS was problematized and confronted. Rather than treating people living with HIV/AIDS as “disease vectors” to be isolated from the general population, as had been the case under the prevailing public health regime, he started his research and organizing from the standpoint of people living with HIV/AIDS – investigating the everyday work that they did in accessing the services that they needed in order to survive. Drawing from archival research, activist interviews and his published works, this article traces how Smith deployed the concept of life work in his research as part of the “Hooking Up” Project, in his public writing in the gay and lesbian press, and in his organizing with AIDS ACTION NOW! in Toronto. Beyond the reproductive labour of individuals in accessing particular politico-administrative regimes, which Smith focused on in his research, we explore how life work can be theorized more broadly to include collective efforts to confront social, biomedical and institutional barriers to living. Hence, in considering Smith’s AIDS activism, we argue that his theorizing and political organizing, taken together, should themselves be seen as forms of life work.
topic activism
knowledge
life work
political activist ethnography
sociology
url https://journals.library.brocku.ca/index.php/SSJ/article/view/1932
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