Affiliation:
1. Hispanic Health Council in Hartford, Connecticut
2. Hispanic Health Council
3. Southwest and Northeast United States
4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
5. Institute for Community Research
Abstract
The day-to-day discourse of illicit drug users is replete with stylized narratives of street experience. These “war stories,” as they are popularly known, are shared among drug users as they hustle for money, purchase drugs, get high, and hang out in diverse street locations. Drug-user narratives, which describe complex adventures and grave suffering, are primary ethnographic sources of information about patterns of drug consumption and risk behaviors. Importantly, in the time of AIDS, street narratives provide a much-needed window on the generally hidden lives of socially marginalized street drug users. As part of an effort to put the analysis of drug-user war stories to use in HIV prevention, in this article the authors analyze a corpus of street narratives told to members of an HIV-prevention research team in Hartford, Connecticut.
Subject
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Cited by
32 articles.
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