Dear All,

This is a reminder that this seminar has been postponed. We will advise you of 
the new date as soon as we receive an update.

Regards,

Sokunthy

Sokunthy Selby-Brown I Education Support Officer

The University of Sydney
Faculty of Science, History and Philosophy of Science

Rm No 521, Carslaw F07 | The University of Sydney | NSW | 2006

[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>  | 
sydney.edu.au<http://sydney.edu.au/>

OFFICE HOURS ARE MONDAY AND FRIDAY

9AM TO 430PM

________________________________
From: HPS Administration <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, May 7, 2025 10:13 AM
To: HPS Admin <[email protected]>
Subject: HPS Research Seminar, Monday 19 May 2025 at 5.30pm

School of History and Philosophy of Science
RESEARCH SEMINAR
[The University of Sydney]
[https://d31hzlhk6di2h5.cloudfront.net/20250506/a1/8c/a4/9f/84602c72f4c731609c6d3e61_1276x850.jpg]
Making a Fact Perform: the U=U campaign

Kane Race (Gender & Cultural Studies, University of Sydney)

Dates: Monday, 19/05/2025
Time: 5:30pm
Venue: F09.331. Madsen Building. Madsen Seminar Room 331
How to register: Free, no registration required

Abstract: Over the last two decades the antiretroviral treatments first used to 
treat HIV disease have been investigated and strategically exploited for 
preventative as well as clinical purposes. Treatment as Prevention names the 
bold new paradigm that has transformed the governmentality of HIV/AIDS on a 
global scale. In 2016, inspired by the triumphalist mood of this new paradigm, 
HIV activists from the Global North coined the acronym U=U (‘Undetectable 
equals Untransmittable’), believing the social and sexual status of people with 
HIV would be redeemed once the possibility of using antiretroviral treatments 
to maintain an undetectable viral load and prevent onward transmission was more 
widely known. In a remarkable feat of biomedical ‘value optimization’,  they 
sloganized U=U as a ‘life-changing, stigma-busting, transmission-stopping 
fact,’ investing antiretroviral treatments with a slew of new social, sexual, 
political and affective functions. Rabeharisoa and colleagues proposed the 
notion of ‘evidence-based activism’ to capture what they see as a definitive 
shift in the work of patient and health activists that entails a concerted 
focus on ‘knowledge production and knowledge mobilisation in the governance of 
health issues’ (2014). While certain aspects of the U=U campaign can be 
understood through the framework of evidence-based activism, U=U extends and 
transforms this frame, representing a novel mode of patient-led, global health 
activism that leverages the performative force of a biomedical claim.

Bio: Kane Race (BA (Hons.), LLB, PhD, FAHA) is Professor of Gender and Cultural 
Studies at the University of Sydney. He approaches drugs — and the 
transformations drugs are taken to induce — as significant elements in the 
crafting of effective history. He has a particular interest in drug practices 
that have emerged in response to HIV/AIDS, from the repurposing of 
antiretroviral drugs to prevent HIV transmission, to subcultural uses of 
stimulants to re-create certain sexual sociabilities. Among his books are 
Pleasure Consuming Medicine: the queer politics of drugs (Duke University 
Press, 2009),The Gay Science: intimate experiments with HIV (Routledge, 2018), 
and Plastic Water: the social and material life of bottled water (with Gay 
Hawkins and Emily Potter, MIT Press, 2015).  He is currently working on a book 
manuscript, Undetectable: the molecularization of HIV stigma, under contract 
with Duke University Press.

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