Songs of the South African AIDS Crisis
By (Author) Gavin Robert Walker
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
16th October 2025
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Music
Sociology and anthropology
Hardback
256
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
Using the concept of musical effervescence, a collective state of synchronized and focused intersubjectivity through music, Gavin Robert Walker reveals how and why songs have become such a ubiquitous and formidable force within the AIDS epidemic in Africa.
Drawn from a rich and powerful cultural history, music has been used to inspire HIV/AIDS activism and advocacy, facilitate local psychosocial healing, communicate life-saving health information, motivate communities towards healthy behaviors, and promote acceptance of individuals living with HIV. In this book, Walker introduces musical effervescence, a collective state of synchronized and focused intersubjectivity through music, to reveal how and why songs have become such a ubiquitous and formidable force within the AIDS epidemic in South Africa. He situates music at the core of human experience, unpacking how collective singing embodies a shared sense of humanity. This compelling analysis engages deeply with interpersonal musical encounters, asking: what makes these experiences both deeply personal and fundamentally social, how can music be relevant to such a diverse range of outcomes, and what can musical effervescence contribute to our understanding of the arts and social, emotional, or physical wellness Challenging conventional assumptions about the universality of music, Walker explores the relational bonds it cultivates through movement, perception, experience, and perspective to reveal musics role in shaping the South African AIDS crisis.
Songs of the South African AIDS Crisis is a powerful demonstration of the increasing need for social science in understanding global medical emergencies. Walker develops fresh modes of enquiry in medical ethnomusicology by bringing nuanced ethnographic accounts of creative performance into discussion with classic theoretical texts. The result is a highly original take on music and illness, which will undoubtedly challenge students, academics, and the wider public to reconsider the ways we think about songs, suffering, and surviving one of the most devastating pandemics in recent history. -- Fraser G. McNeill, University of Pretoria
The functionality of music, and other expressive forms in public health contexts in Africa, continues to call for diverse theoretical and methodological approaches to illuminate subtle meanings and dimensions of human experience. Gavin Robert Walker does just that in this work by engaging multiple voices and moments in the history of the HIV/AIDS crisis in South Africa. He provides a uniquely discursive framework that adds an important layer to existing body of scholarship about music and HIV/AIDS, relevant even for understanding the broader issues of health, culture, and society. -- Austin C. Okigbo, University of Colorado at Boulder
Gavin Robert Walker is an Ethnomusicologist and Associate Professor at Minjiang University, China.