In feminist analyses of HIV/AIDS and heterosexuality it is often suggested that the constitution of sexual difference and gender concerns the specific image of heterosexual women?s bodies. Such understandings of power and embodiment are especially at play in analyses of safer-(hetero)sex advertisements where the object of the condom is considered to represent a diseased female body. But while the object of the condom in AIDS heterosexual culture is generally understood to concern a female ?other? and in addition a disappearing male body, in this article I call into question this understanding of the condom. Specifically, through an analysis of AIDS research findings on safer heterosex practise, I suggest that the object of the condom concerns not sexed female bodies but a heterosexual masculine self-identity. |