Jradams1 Annotations

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How would you describe the image’s subject?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 10:08pm

The image's subject is the discourse around HIV prevention. This comes through quite clearly.

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What does the image convey about “toxic subjects” (their character, dynamics, etc.)? (How) Does this image open up the concept of “toxicity”?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 10:05pm

Guilberly is using this image to discuss the divide between the "competing HIV prevention discourses" that frame the pursuit of safe ways to engage in casual sex. This image directly confronts and contests the idea that sexually active gay men should be silent and ashamed. I think there is plenty to work with here for opening up the concept of toxicity, but I would like to know more about what Guilberly thinks personally. Is it the coerced silence that Guilberly finds to be toxic? If so, perhaps that could be indicated in the title of this particular artifact?

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How is this image “ethnographic”? Would you add anything to this image’s “design statement”?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 9:48pm

This image can be understood as ethnographic in that it shows one way in which options for protection against HIV are being publicized.

In the design statement, Guilberly discusses the design of the add, but I am curious to know what he thinks about the construction of the photograph of the add. Of course, the add is quite interesting in itself, but personally I would love to know more about the context its placement: where it was discovered, what that might mean about the intended audience, who created it the add, why resort to this sort of rhetoric? Guilberly also mentions "racial and sexual undertones" embedded in the image. I can definitely see how this is the case but I would also like to know how he is reading these undertones (though perhaps this would be more appropriate in the caption).

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Describe your immediate reception or impression of this image (visceral, emotional, intellectual)?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 9:22pm

This image immediately made me smile. It's subversive. It's optimistic. I found it delightful.

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Is there a single word or short phrase that captures your overall response to this image?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 7:47pm

Post-abstinence.

Spreading the good word.

The new New Testament.

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How does your eye move around the image? Where did you first focus, where does your gaze end up?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 7:37pm

My eye was immediately drawn to the the large bold letters "fuck raw." I then processed the image of the pill and the rest of the advertisement to understand that it was marketing the drug PrEP as a way of preventing the transmission of HIV. I then began to notice the context, how the add plastered onto wooden panels running along a brick wall. I can see the graffiti in the background, the trash and leaves building up in the crease between the panels and the black granite floor. You can also see the edges of other advertisements and get a sense of the series of adds lining what appears to be a sidewalk in a downtown area. It is a small-yet-complicated image with lots to explore. In the end, however, my eyes gravitated back towards the photo's powerful statement of sexual freedom.

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Can you suggest ways to collage, add to the framing, or otherwise elaborate this image to strengthen its ethnographic messaging?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 7:29pm

I am so curious to know more about where photograph was taken and how commonplace these sorts of advertisements are.

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Why do you think this particular image was selected or fashioned in the way presented?

Thursday, December 6, 2018 - 7:26pm

This image was likely chosen because it is a rather blunt and provocative. The add is so simple, yet clear, direct, and thought provoking. It is also remarkably different from any other drug advertisements that I have ever seen, which indicates an appeal to a specific audience. Although the message is clear, I am left with so many questions about who made it and posted it. This delayed satisfaction makes it all the more intriguing and appealing as an image to think with/about. 

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