About me
Oral History, Queer History, History of Sexualities, and Medical Humanities
Award
Leverhulme Early Career Fellow
The Leverhulme Trust
In 1980s Italy, queers* - including lesbian, intersex, non-binary, trans, and agender identities - forged political solidarities by recognizing the interconnectedness of their marginalization. Their coalitions were not just strategic alliances but sites of shared rebellion against structural exclusion. Reflecting current times, Italy¡¯s activism unfolded in a landscape shaped by shifting welfare policies, restrictive migration laws, and the rise of neoliberalism, making resistance both deeply local and inherently transnational. As a key entry point to Europe, Italy¡¯s approach to migration and public health policies has been shaped by its geographical and socio-economic position with transnational implications. In 1981, street sex workers in Italy staged their first strike against HIV-related stigma. By 1988, Rome hosted its first World AIDS Day, marked by a constellation of grassroots awareness events in community hubs, clubs, caf¨¦s, and bookstores, where queers gathered to challenge misinformation and demand action. In 1991, transgender movement in Bologna (MiT) published a comprehensive informative fanzine on treatments for HIV, advocating for community care while directly challenging the ruthless experimental medicalization and Florence witnessed Italy¡¯s first national queer AIDS demonstration, where activists laid out a memorial quilt in front of the Church of Santa Maria Novella - echoing the 1985 AIDS Memorial Quilt displayed in Washington, USA, as a powerful gesture of transnational solidarity, linking Italian activism to a broader global movement demanding dignity, visibility, and justice for those living with HIV. In 1995, a coalition of queer movements, doctors, and public health experts published Italy¡¯s first inclusive HIV informational guidelines and Italy became the first country in the world to elect a transgender municipal councilor; sex worker-led networks launched the country¡¯s first peer-to-peer harm reduction strategies, specifically aimed at protecting queer people of color and racialized sex workers from HIV transmission on the streets.
Research projects (1)
Fighting HIV Through Intersectionality: Queer and Trans Activism in 1980s Italy
PI: Dr Giulia Sbaffi
Funded by: The Leverhulme Trust
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