Sussex Research Online: No conditions. Results ordered -Date Deposited. 2023-11-19T10:22:35Z EPrints https://sro.sussex.ac.uk/images/sitelogo.png http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/ 2016-01-27T12:16:51Z 2019-07-02T22:31:44Z http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/54042 This item is in the repository with the URL: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/54042 2016-01-27T12:16:51Z 'Because even the placement of a comma might be important': expertise, filtered embodiment and social capital in online sexual health promotion

The Terrence Higgins Trust (THT) is a leading UK HIV and sexual health organization, and community outreach and support remain a key tenet of the charity’s philosophy. Outreach work includes campaign drives in bars, clubs and saunas, peer-led workshops, support groups, condom distribution in community venues and one-to-one intervention programmes to help raise HIV/AIDS awareness. But what happens to community activism and outreach when the community one seeks to engage moves online? In this article, we report on a study capturing the experiences of workers engaged in THT’s digital outreach service, Netreach. Using ethnographic and other qualitative methods, we identify the shifting nature of health promotion outreach work and the changes in expert–client relationship that occur when community outreach takes place on digital platforms. We identify how issues of (dis)embodiment, expertise and cultural capital play a role indetermining the success – or failure – of online outreach work.

Sharif Mowlabocus 13672 Justin Harbottle 193314 Ben Tooke 302592 Craig Haslop 107582 Rohit Dasgupta 329761
2013-09-05T11:46:19Z 2014-03-14T13:31:12Z http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/45519 This item is in the repository with the URL: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/45519 2013-09-05T11:46:19Z Porn laid bare: gay men, pornography and bareback sex

This article details the preliminary findings from Porn Laid Bare, a collaborative research project between the University of Sussex and the Terrence Higgins Trust, Brighton. We explore the multidimensional relationship that respondents identified as having formed with pornographic material, together with its role within gay male subculture. We then consider how interview respondents understood and conceptualised bareback pornography. Our findings reveal consistent contradictions between general discussions of gay pornography and specific discussions of bareback representations. Utilising Dean’s (2009) work on bareback subculture and the ‘ambivalent gift’, we develop a critical reading of these contradictions in order to identify the methods by which the anxieties and pleasures of bareback pornography were handled by respondents.

Sharif Mowlabocus 13672 Justin Harbottle 193314 Charlie Witzel