AIDS in SF

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AIDS has had an enormous impact on SF, in plot, characterization, world-building, and theme. Below listing some works and how they treat AIDS. Aspects of AIDS that have affected SF include:

  • the sex- and blood-based transmission of AIDS;
  • the often fearful and homophobic reactions of the public and state, especially in the early years;
  • the ubiquity of loss in some communities, and the sense of deep grief over such a rapidly sweeping and great loss;
  • the difficulty in identifying the disease, and finding a cure;

Even when AIDS is not, itself, the disease, its influence can be seen in the fictional plagues that sweep the pages of SF.

Significance in plot and world-building

Numerous stories have revolved around AIDS or AIDS-like diseases, or premised their story of state tyranny, sexual repression, or social breakdown on state (over)-reactions to AIDS or mutations of AIDS.

  • Charles Oberndorf. Sheltered Lives (1992) (people with "hives" are sent to concentration camps to die; "hives" are not AIDS but are clearly inspired in part by proposals to deal with AIDS. This was just one piece of an overall theme of state control and supervision of human life.)

Thematic and metaphoric treatments

Numerous works have treated AIDS metaphorically, layering new complexity and awareness of disease transmission into stories of lycanthropy or vampirism, or examining the tragedy of AIDS in light of older motifs and plots.

  • Peg Kerr. The Wild Swans (1999) - (AIDS story & retelling of the old fairy tale.)
  • Mark Merliss. An Arrow's Flight (1998). (Fascinating retelling of the Trojan War, entwined with the gay 70s & 80s & the oncoming, also seemingly interminable, war with AIDS ...)


Use in characterization

Characters that have AIDS, much like characters with tuberculosis (consumption) in literature about or from the 19th century. Creates sympathy, sense of doom, etc.