is
for Kitsch. While all terminal illnesses are prone to sentimentalization,
AIDS propaganda has been particularly heavy-handed because of the
unusual circumstances in which activists were initially forced to raise
money to pay for the enormous costs of research, treatment, and education.
In the absence of federal support in the earliest stages of the epidemic,
doctors, as well as leaders of the gay community, had to convince the private
sector to bear the financial burden of hospital costs, a task they undertook
by devising representations of AIDS that appealed to the broadest possible
audiences. Because the American public was at best ambivalent, at worst
actively hostile, to the first casualties of the disease, it had to be
wooed, seduced, and placated with kitsch which activists used as the detergent
in which such forbidden topics as anal sex, promiscuity, "bodily fluids,"
and recreational drug use were laundered. The need for kitsch was
a direct consequence of the need for funding, and the more money that was
needed, the kitschier the disease became. By packaging the epidemic
in cliches, activists reduced potential donors to a state of maximum susceptibility
to the plight of the disease's victims, who were paraded before us like
mistreated animals at a carnival.
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