Maternity and sexuality of african women living with HIV in France : predjudices and experiences

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Based on qualitative research in hospital and associative settings with women from subsaharian Africa living with HIV/AIDS in France, this article shows how the discours and the attitudes of health and social service professionals are guided by culturalist and racist stereotypes about a presumed necessary meternity and submissive exuality of African women. These stereotypes structure their insertion on the job market, their access to citizenship and and their place in the community  and  they  influence  their  way of experienceing sexuality. The confinement  of  black  women  and  immigrants to the devalorized sectors of domestic work and prostitution contributes to the reproduction of culturalist and racist stereotypes about their sexuality and maternity which are perceived and construed as deviant from dominant references.

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