Lars Martinson |
The Last Battle
David France’s remarkable history of the fight against
AIDS is a chronicle of the recent past that sheds light on the fights to
come.
By Isaac Butler
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When memory fails, we must
imagine. So let us imagine that it is early 1982, and a new, almost
universally fatal disease is spreading through the gay communities in
New York and San Francisco. A year ago, people called it “gay cancer,”
because of the telltale purple lesions—evidence of an otherwise uncommon
malignancy, Kaposi’s sarcoma—that appeared on the afflicted. Now, in
1982, with hundreds of gay men coming down with it, people are calling
it GRID, Gay Related Immune Disease. By the end of the year, it will be
called AIDS, Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, and the number of
cases in the United States will rise above a thousand. By the summer of
1983, approximately half of New York’s gay men will be infected, a
harbinger of worse times to come. By 1990, a person will die of AIDS
every 12 minutes in America.
In early 1982, no one knew for certain what caused GRID, or
how, exactly, it was transmitted. Once KS lesions were visible on your
face or hands, you would likely lose your job, because neither gay men
nor GRID patients had any legal discrimination protections. You could be
evicted from your apartment. If you died without a will, your estranged
family could claim your belongings and your partner would get nothing.
Very few doctors realized they needed to provide preventative care for
PCP, the strain of pneumonia that was most likely to kill you but could
be prevented with a common drug called Bactrim. Other opportunistic
infections, like KS, had no agreed-upon treatment.
Making matters worse, the hurdles GRID patients faced from
both the health care and political systems that were meant to protect
them were considerable. The Reagan White House slashed its GRID budget
in an attempt to cut government spending even as the mysterious disease
spread wider. The only hospital in New York City that would admit GRID
patients was the New York University Medical Center, but soon even NYU
changed its policies so that patients could only be admitted to the
emergency room, often receiving treatment, and dying, in hallways. Once
researchers—and then the public—discovered that the nation’s blood
supply has been tainted, panic spread. William F. Buckley proposed in the pages of the New York Times
that “everyone detected with AIDS should be tattooed in the upper
forearm, to protect common-needle users, and on the buttocks, to prevent
the victimization of other homosexuals.” Sen. Jesse Helms
advocated for mandatory testing and “quarantining” people with AIDS,
and Reagan Education Secretary William Bennett proposed extending the
sentences of convicts with AIDS indefinitely. These were not minority
ideas. A Los Angeles Times poll found
that 50 percent of Americans supported quarantining people with AIDS,
and that 48 percent of them, in a chilling foreshadowing of Donald
Trump’s plans to register Muslims, favored special identification cards
for people with AIDS.
As How to Survive a Plague,
journalist and filmmaker David France’s sweeping history of the AIDS
crisis, chronicles, over the years to come, every small success would
bring new setbacks. The government would prove willfully inept at
fighting the disease, leading to tens of thousands of unnecessary
deaths. AZT, the one drug the government managed to get on the market in
the early years of fighting the illness, was too toxic for half of AIDS
patients to take, cost $10,000 a year, and (as a later study
definitively showed) did not actually prolong the life expectancy of
people with AIDS. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the closest thing the United States
had to an AIDS czar, refused to set a research agenda and enlisted
pharmaceutical companies to help shape the government’s research
efforts. As a result, the federal government devoted most of its
resources to further study of AZT, instead of remedies and guidelines
for treating opportunistic infections, or basic research into how the
human immunodeficiency virus worked. AIDS researchers, used to standard
operating procedures that treated test subjects as mere data points,
ignored the community of people with AIDS, often with disastrous
consequences. It took the Reagan administration until 1987 to create a
Presidential Commission on HIV, and, as France points out, it came
stacked with such luminaries as “Penny Pullen, an obscure Illinois
lawmaker who came to the attention of the administration when she
warned, without evidence, that a subset of homosexuals were engaged in
`blood terrorism’ by deliberately donating infected blood.”
France’s story begins with the New York Times’ “Rare Cancer Seen in 41 Homosexuals” headline and ends with the introduction of the triple cocktail drugs that reversed the progress of HIV in the human body to such an extent that people previously on death’s door were able to lead normal lives. Along the way, France follows a large circle of activists, doctors, medical researchers, and journalists (including himself) as they fight the disease and, quite often, each other. Many of the central subjects—Larry Kramer, Peter Staley, Mark Harrington, Garance Franke-Ruta—will be familiar to viewers of the film, but many other subjects, particularly those in the medical community, will not.
David France by Ken Schles |
In the face of fear and hopelessness, of widespread neglect
and hatred, of a mounting disaster spreading further and further like
spilled ink on a marble floor, people with AIDS and their allies
organized. They founded organizations both mainstream and radical to
fight the disease: Gay Men’s Health Crisis, the National Association of
People with AIDS, the AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power, the NAMES Project
AIDS Memorial Quilt, the American Medical Foundation, the Gay &
Lesbian Alliance Against Discrimination. They invented safe sex, saving
countless lives.
They bootlegged, stole, and imported drugs on the black market, distributing them through “buyers clubs.” Most importantly, they went to war on the political system that stigmatized them, the medical system that neglected them, the research system that ignored their humanity, and the culture at large that hated them. This fight led to sweeping changes in how drugs are tested, the humanization of both AIDS patients and queer people in the public eye, and, eventually, the medical breakthroughs that finally tamed and transformed AIDS for those who can access treatment.
They bootlegged, stole, and imported drugs on the black market, distributing them through “buyers clubs.” Most importantly, they went to war on the political system that stigmatized them, the medical system that neglected them, the research system that ignored their humanity, and the culture at large that hated them. This fight led to sweeping changes in how drugs are tested, the humanization of both AIDS patients and queer people in the public eye, and, eventually, the medical breakthroughs that finally tamed and transformed AIDS for those who can access treatment.
It’s an extraordinary story: a medical mystery that becomes a chaotic, contentious, but most importantly successful movement for the rights and dignity of people despised by society. It deserves an extraordinary book. How to Survive a Plague
is such a book, a sweeping social history, a bracing act of in-depth
journalism, and a searingly honest memoir all at once. It is also,
technically, a film tie-in, as France directed the acclaimed 2012 documentary of the same name, which offers a précis of roughly the final third of the book.
Another, perhaps better, way to think of How to Survive a Plague, however,
is as a chronicle of the recent past that sheds light on the fights to
come. Now as our president-elect is Donald Trump, and we enter another
time in which we must fight together against insurmountable odds to
shift an unfeeling political and cultural landscape for the better,
France’s book is even more essential. As a culture we run the
risk of romanticizing the battles waged during the crisis, of turning
the years from 1981 to 1996 into an inevitable, uplifting narrative of
triumph. Like Eyes on the Prize (which the founders of ACT UP studied), How to Survive a Plague
resists our most sentimental impulses. Yes, it chronicles a time that
the arc of history actually bent towards justice, but it also details
the superhuman efforts of the hundreds of people who forced that arc to bend—and reminds us of our national complicity in millions of deaths.
France’s story begins with the New York Times’ “Rare Cancer Seen in 41 Homosexuals” headline and ends with the introduction of the triple cocktail drugs that reversed the progress of HIV in the human body to such an extent that people previously on death’s door were able to lead normal lives. Along the way, France follows a large circle of activists, doctors, medical researchers, and journalists (including himself) as they fight the disease and, quite often, each other. Many of the central subjects—Larry Kramer, Peter Staley, Mark Harrington, Garance Franke-Ruta—will be familiar to viewers of the film, but many other subjects, particularly those in the medical community, will not.
Thanks to his own work as a journalist, extensive research,
and—due to both the introduction of the camcorder and the fear that they
would not live to see the future they worked for—the tendency of AIDS
activists to obsessively record their every conversation, France summons
up everything from late-night heart-to-hearts between penniless
activists to tony dinners in Georgetown mansions. Some of the stories
contained in Survive, such as the plot to infiltrate the New York Post
with gay journalists and the secret bootlegging effort that pressured
Merck to move forward on triple cocktails, will likely be surprises even
for those who lived through the heights of the crisis. France also,
thankfully, sets the record straight about Gaetan Dugas, the so-called
“patient zero” who was scapegoated unfairly for the spread of AIDS by the publicity and marketing machine of Randy Shilts’ And the Band Played On.
How to Survive a Plague ruthlessly focuses on the
scientific, medical, and political struggles of the time. Thus we get no
Liberace and no Magic Johnson, but we do get Rock Hudson and Ryan
White, as their deaths changed the political landscape of the disease.
We get plenty on The Normal Heart, because it is largely about the Gay Men’s Health Crisis, but nothing on As Is or Angels in America.
Anyone coming for a definitive history of ACT UP is likely to be
disappointed, as the book’s discussion of ACT UP remains, like the
film’s, largely focused on the Treatment and Data Committee, which
eventually broke from ACT UP to become the Treatment Action Group. Even
the late Bob Rafsky, a major subject of France’s film who goaded Bill
Clinton into adopting AIDS as a cause shortly before he died, receives
only occasional mention. By the book’s own admission, this means
that—while France discusses the additional hurdles that HIV-positive
women and people of color faced—How To Survive a Plague largely centers on the activities, opinions, and actions of white men.
While France shows a journalist’s restraint in eschewing
psychological speculation about his subjects, he is also a deeply
opinionated witness to their triumphs and foibles, including his own. He
appears to have refused the temptation of the memoirist to reconfigure
his own history in maximally self-serving ways. After visiting a dying
friend in 1984, for example, France writes that “I left the hospital as
if he were already gone, as the old hands in Auschwitz did for those
they distastefully called Muselmanner, the dead who hadn’t died
yet, a mere technicality. The look in his eyes seared me, yes, but I
was not yet numb from death, just terrified of it to the point of
hypochondria and shameful behavior. I lifted my hand out of his with the
same cold finality, and let my friend die the death he feared, isolated
and alone.”
Another regular target of his jaundiced eye is the book’s
most famous subject: Larry Kramer, the co-founder of both Gay Men’s
Health Crisis and ACT UP, whom France depicts as equal parts essential
force and pariah. One senses little love lost between the two men during
How to Survive a Plague’s depiction of Kramer’s play The Normal Heart
as both “Kramer’s betrayal”—a self-serving roman á clef that deeply
wounded Kramer’s fellow activists—and also a work so powerful that by
play’s end France “was not the only one gasping for breath.”
How to Survive a Plague is a testament to the
bravery, sacrifice, smarts, and humor necessary to win a seemingly
unwinnable battle. By detailing how activists attacked the disease and
the system that perpetuated it, France provides what now feels like
something of a survival guide to the years to come. Yet, while the book
is inspiring, it is also unsparing in its depiction of the lasting
ramifications of national trauma. France undercuts what could have been a
simplistic, uplifting ending with a coda that brings us up to date with
the survivors of the plague. Their accounts show us the ways they came
to feel lost in the years following and the ways they are still haunted.
Yet this honesty, just like France’s honesty about the failures,
trials, and absurdities of the fight to tame AIDS, means the hope
contained within the book feels real and earned. While no one planned
for How to Survive a Plague to be published at a new moment of
maximum hopelessness, here we are, and the chaotic, contentious, painful
form of hope offered in this book is vital even as the fight it
chronicles remains unfinished.
How to Survive a Plague: The Inside Story of How Citizens and Science Tamed AIDS by David France. Knopf.
How to Survive a Plague: The Inside Story of How Citizens and Science Tamed AIDS by David France. Knopf.
Check
out this great listen on Audible.com. The definitive history of the
successful battle to halt the AIDS epidemic - from the creator of, and
inspired by, the seminal documentary How to Survive a Plague. A
riveting, powerful telling of the story of the grassroots movement of
activists, many of...
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Isaac Butler is a writer and theater director, most recently of Real Enemies, which premiered in the fall of 2015 at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
Read more articles from SLATE, here.
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