Stuff I've been reading (April 2022)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in April 2022:

Books and dissertations

  • Ames, Jonathan, ed. Sexual metamorphosis: An anthology of transsexual memoirs. vintage Books, 2005.
  • Arney, William Ray, and Bernard J. Bergen. Medicine and the management of living: Taming the last great beast. University of Chicago Press, 1984.
  • Bakker, Alex. Transgender in Nederland: Een buitengewone geschiedenis. Boom, 2018.
  • Bakker, Alex. The Dutch Approach: Fifty Years of Transgender Health Care at the VU Amsterdam Gender Clinic. Boom, 2021.
  • Carel, Havi. Phenomenology of illness. Oxford University Press, 2016.
  • Doan, Petra L., and Lynda Johnston. Rethinking Transgender Identities: Reflections from Around the Globe. Routledge, 2022.
  • Douglas, Heather. Science, policy, and the value-free ideal. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2009.
  • Drucker, Donna J. The classification of sex: Alfred Kinsey and the organization of knowledge. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2014.
  • Forrester, John. Thinking in cases. John Wiley & Sons, 2017.
  • Fraley, Elwin E. Teaching Surgeons’ Hands to Heal: A Urological Surgical Chairman’s Chronicle: The History of the Department of Urologic Surgery, University of Minnesota, 1969 - 1993. AuthorHouse, 2014.
  • Gieryn, Thomas F. Cultural boundaries of science: Credibility on the line. University of Chicago Press, 2022.
  • Gossett, Reina, Eric A. Stanley, and Johanna Burton. Trap door: Trans cultural production and the politics of visibility. New Museum, 2017.
  • Green, Richard. Gay Rights, Trans Rights: A psychiatrist/lawyer’s 50-year battle. Agenda Book, 2018.
  • Howlett, Peter, and Mary S. Morgan, eds. How well do facts travel?: The dissemination of reliable knowledge. Cambridge University Press, 2010.
  • Hubschman, Lynn. Transsexuals: Life from both sides. Diane Publishing, 1999.
  • Klawiter, Maren. The biopolitics of breast cancer: Changing cultures of disease and activism. University of Minnesota Press, 2008.
  • Kuhar, Roman, and David Paternotte, eds. Anti-gender campaigns in Europe: Mobilizing against equality. Rowman & Littlefield, 2017.
  • Malatino, Hil. Side Affects: On Being Trans and Feeling Bad. University of Minnesota Press, 2022.
  • Merrill, Daniel C. Trapped. Xlibris, 2012.
  • Repo, Jemima. The biopolitics of gender. Oxford University Press, 2015.
  • Sullivan, Terri Se. Conversion therapy ground zero: Interrogating the production of gender as a pathology in the United States. California Institute of Integral Studies, 2017.
  • Sumerau, J. E., and Eric Anthony Grollman. Black lives and bathrooms: Racial and gendered reactions to minority rights movements. Lexington Books, 2020.
  • Swaab, Dick Frans. We are our brains: a neurobiography of the brain, from the womb to Alzheimer’s. Random House, 2014.
  • Taylor, Charles Alan. Defining science: A rhetoric of demarcation. University of Wisconsin Press, 1996.
  • Wiggins, Tobias BD. The Sexual Politics of Clinical Psychoanalysis and Transgender Mental Health. Diss. York University, 2019.
  • Zerubavel, Eviatar. The fine line. University of Chicago Press, 1993.

Papers and Chapters

  • Aboim, Sofia. “‘What’s in a name?’The discursive construction of gender identity over time.” Journal of Gender Studies (2022): 1-14.
  • Akagi, Mikio, and Frederick W. Gooding. “Microaggressions and Objectivity: Experimental Measures and Lived Experience.” Philosophy of Science 88.5 (2021): 1090-1100.
  • Ayoub, Phillip M. “With arms wide shut: Threat perception, norm reception, and mobilized resistance to LGBT rights.” Journal of Human Rights 13.3 (2014): 337-362.
  • Barbi, Ludovica, and Gianluca Tornese. “Inequalities in gender-affirming care in Europe: the problematic balance between politics and health.” Archives of Disease in Childhood (2022).
  • Barker-Plummer, Bernadette. “Fixing Gwen: News and the mediation of (trans) gender challenges.” Feminist Media Studies 13.4 (2013): 710-724.
  • Böhmer, Maria. “The case as a travelling genre.” History of the Human Sciences 33.3-4 (2020): 111-128.
  • Buchanan, Roderick D. “Ink blots or profile plots: The Rorschach versus the MMPI as the right tool for a science-based profession.” Science, technology, & human values 22.2 (1997): 168-206.
  • Budge, Stephanie L. “Psychotherapists as gatekeepers: An evidence-based case study highlighting the role and process of letter writing for transgender clients.” Psychotherapy 52.3 (2015): 287.
  • Burke, J. D., Harold Alan Pincus, and Herbert Pardes. “The clinician-researcher in psychiatry.” American Journal of Psychiatry 143.8 (1986): 968-975.
  • Ceccarelli, Leah. “Manufactured scientific controversy: Science, rhetoric, and public debate.” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 14.2 (2011): 195-228.
  • Charney, Davida. “Lone geniuses in popular science: The devaluation of scientific consensus.” Written Communication 20.3 (2003): 215-241.
  • Costa, Dalia, and Miguel Miranda. “Public Policies Advances on Transgender People in Portugal.” In Transgender Health: Advances and New Perspectives, 2022.
  • Cross, Anne. “The flexibility of scientific rhetoric: A case study of UFO researchers.” Qualitative Sociology 27.1 (2004): 3-34.
  • De Boer, Marjolein, René Van Der Hulst, and Jenny Slatman. “The surprise of a breast reconstruction: a longitudinal phenomenological study to women’s expectations about reconstructive surgery.” Human Studies 38.3 (2015): 409-430.
  • Denford, Sarah, et al. “Understanding normality: a qualitative analysis of breast cancer patients concepts of normality after mastectomy and reconstructive surgery.” Psycho‐oncology 20.5 (2011): 553-558.
  • DiMarco, Marina. “Wishful Intelligibility, Black Boxes, and Epidemiological Explanation.” Philosophy of Science 88.5 (2021): 824-834.
  • Drabinski, Kate. “Incarnate possibilities: female to male transgender narratives and the making of self.” Journal of Narrative Theory 44.2 (2014): 304-329.
  • Draz, Marie. “Retro-Sex, Anti-Trans Legislation, and the Colonial/Modern Gender System.” philoSOPHIA 11.1/2 (2021): 26-48.
  • Dubrule, Amanda. “Gender and Habit: John Dewey and Iris Marion Young on Embodiment and Transformation.” The Pluralist 17.1 (2022): 45-51.
  • Fabris, Ligia, Holly Patch, and Karsten Schubert. “Liberalism and the Construction of Gender (Non-) Normative Bodies and Queer Identities.” Global Contestations of Gender Rights (2022): 269.
  • Freeman, Elizabeth. “Time and social justice.” Time & Society (2022): 0961463X211073563.
  • Garfinkel, Paul E., et al. “The clinician-investigator interface in psychiatry: I—values and problems.” The Canadian Journal of Psychiatry 34.5 (1989): 361-363.
  • Goldenfein, Jake, and Monique Mann. “Tech money in civil society: whose interests do digital rights organisations represent?.” Cultural Studies (2022): 1-35.
  • Grzanka, Patrick R., et al. “The biopolitics of passing and the possibility of radically inclusive transgender health care.” The American Journal of Bioethics 18.12 (2018): 17-19.
  • Hekma, Gert, and Jan Willem Duyvendak. “Queer Netherlands: A puzzling example.” Sexualities 14.6 (2011): 625-631.
  • Hickson, Helen. “Becoming a critical narrativist: Using critical reflection and narrative inquiry as research methodology.” Qualitative social work 15.3 (2016): 380-391.
  • Iversen, Maura D., et al. “The prognostic importance of patient pre-operative expectations of surgery for lumbar spinal stenosis.” Patient education and counseling 34.2 (1998): 169-178.
  • Kirkland, Anna, Shauhin Talesh, and Angela K. Perone. “Health insurance rights and access to health care for trans people: The social construction of medical necessity.” Law & Society Review 55.4 (2021): 539-562.
  • Korolczuk, Elżbieta, and Agnieszka Graff. “Gender as “Ebola from Brussels”: The anticolonial frame and the rise of illiberal populism.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 43.4 (2018): 797-821.
  • Lee, Raymond LM. “Time, space, and power in digital modernity: From liquid to solid control.” Time & Society (2021): 0961463X211016781.
  • Lowe, Charles U. “The consensus development programme: technology assessment at the National Institute of Health.” British Medical Journal 280.6231 (1980): 1583.
  • Marino, Lauren. “Speaking for others.” Macalester Journal of Philosophy 14.1 (2005): 4.
  • Marvin, Amy. “Groundwork for transfeminist care ethics: Sara Ruddick, trans children, and solidarity in dependency.” Hypatia 34.1 (2019): 101-120.
  • Meakins, Jonathan L. “Innovation in surgery: the rules of evidence.” The American journal of surgery 183.4 (2002): 399-405.
  • Mittelstadt, Brent. “From individual to group privacy in big data analytics.” Philosophy & Technology 30.4 (2017): 475-494.
  • Morley, Christine. “Critical reflection as a research methodology.” In Knowing differently: Arts-based and collaborative research methods (2008): 265-280.
  • Necheles, Thomas. “Standards of medical care: How does an innovative medical procedure become accepted?.” Law, Medicine and Health Care 10.1 (1982): 15-18.
  • Noah, Lars. “Informed consent and the elusive dichotomy between standard and experimental therapy.” American Journal of Law & Medicine 28.4 (2002): 361-408.
  • Pitts, Marian, et al. “Health service use and experiences of transgender people: Australian and New Zealand perspectives.” Gay and Lesbian Issues and Psychology Review 5.3 (2009): 167.
  • Reynolds, Joel Michael. “Toward a critical theory of harm: ableism, normativity, and transability (biid).” APA newsletter on philosophy and medicine 16.1 (2016).
  • Rondot, Sarah Ray. ““Bear Witness” and “Build Legacies”: Twentieth-and Twenty-First-Century Trans* Autobiography.” a/b: Auto/Biography Studies 31.3 (2016): 527-551.
  • Schotel, Anne Louise. “Mainstream or Marginalized? How German and Dutch Newspapers Frame LGBTI.” Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society (2022).
  • Shojania, Kaveh G. “The frustrating case of incident-reporting systems.” BMJ Quality & Safety 17.6 (2008): 400-402.
  • Solomon, Michael J., and Robin S. McLeod. “Should we be performing more randomized controlled trials evaluating surgical operations?.” Surgery 118.3 (1995): 459-467.
  • Solomon, Michael J., and Robin S. McLeod. “Surgery and the randomised controlled trial: past, present and future.” The Medical Journal of Australia 169.7 (1998): 380-383.
  • Spodick, David H. “Numerators without denominators: there is no FDA for the surgeon.” JAMA 232.1 (1975): 35-36.
  • Sumerau, J. Edward, Ryan T. Cragun, and Lain AB Mathers. “Contemporary religion and the cisgendering of reality.” Social Currents 3.3 (2016): 293-311.
  • Sumerau, J. Edward, Eric Anthony Grollman, and Ryan T. Cragun. ““Oh my god, I sound like a horrible person”: Generic processes in the conditional acceptance of sexual and gender diversity.” Symbolic Interaction 41.1 (2018): 62-82.
  • Sylvester, Christine. “Anatomy of a Footnote.” Security Dialogue 38.4 (2007): 547-558.
  • Tonelli, Mark R., and Devora Shapiro. “Experiential knowledge in clinical medicine: use and justification.” Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 41.2 (2020): 67-82.
  • Whitestone, Stephenson Brooks, Howard Giles, and Daniel Linz. “Overcoming ungrievability: Transgender expectations for identity after death.” Sociological inquiry 90.2 (2020): 316-338.
  • Zohny, H., B. Earp, and J. Savulescu. “Enhancing gender.” Journal of Bioethical Inquiry (2021).