Resumen
In 1981, a medical report was published that described the death of a Spanish
man with symptoms of Kaposi’s sarcoma, an illness that was increasingly linked
to AIDS. Two years later, other reports detailed the illnesses and deaths of two
young hemophiliac brothers in Spain who died only months after receiving blood
transfusions. This article analyzes the mediated response to these cases, along with
the construction of an origins narrative around the outbreak of AIDS in Spain.
The origins story created in this moment in Spain would determine not only the
public reaction to the illness, but the legal and governmental response, in turn
provoking a true crisis of modernity within Spain. By analyzing these first cases
and their subsequent media coverage, this article examines the images and words
that constructed a unilateral history of the origins of HIV/AIDS in Spain.