Stuff I've been reading (August 2020)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in August 2020:

Books

  • Anker, Elizabeth S., and Rita Felski, eds. Critique and postcritique. Duke University Press, 2017.
  • Brown, Wendy. Politics out of History. Princeton University Press, 2018.
  • Campbell, Sue. Interpreting the personal: Expression and the formation of feelings. Cornell University Press, 1997.
  • Campbell, Sue. Our faithfulness to the past: The ethics and politics of memory. Oxford University Press, 2014.
  • Chaudhary, Nandita, et al., eds. Resistance in everyday life: Constructing cultural experiences. Springer, 2017.
  • Crouch, Colin. Post-democracy. Cambridge: Polity, 2004.
  • Ferguson, Ann, and Mechthild Nagel, eds. Dancing with Iris: The Philosophy of Iris Marion Young. Oxford University Press, 2009.
  • Honig, Bonnie. Political theory and the displacement of politics. Cornell University Press, 2016.
  • Howcroft, Debra, and Eileen Moore Trauth, eds. Handbook of critical information systems research: Theory and application. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2005.
  • Koselleck, Reinhart. Sediments of time: on possible histories. Stanford University Press, 2018.
  • Leaker, Anthony. Against Free Speech. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2020.
  • Reddy, Gayatri. With respect to sex: Negotiating hijra identity in South India. Yoda Press, 2006.
  • Rorty, Richard. Philosophy and Social Hope. Penguin UK, 1999.
  • de Saint-Laurent, Constance, Sandra Obradović, and Kevin R. Carriere, eds. Imagining collective futures: Perspectives from social, cultural and political psychology. Springer, 2018.
  • Shotwell, Alexis. Knowing otherwise: Race, gender, and implicit understanding. Pennsylvania State Press, 2011.
  • Smith, Dorothy E. The conceptual practices of power: A feminist sociology of knowledge. University of Toronto Press, 1990.
  • Suchman, Lucy. Human-machine reconfigurations: Plans and situated actions. Cambridge university press, 2007.
  • Williams, Alex. Political Hegemony and Social Complexity: Mechanisms of Power After Gramsci. Springer, 2019.
  • Young, Iris Marion. On female body experience:” Throwing like a girl” and other essays. Oxford University Press, 2005.

Papers and Chapters

  • Assiter, Alison. “Feminist epistemology and value.” Feminist Theory 1 (2000): 3.
  • Bar-Tal, Daniel. “Collective memory as social representations.” Papers on Social representations 23.1 (2014): 5-1.
  • Barash, Jeffrey A. “At the threshold of memory: Collective memory between personal experience and political identity.” META: Research in Hermeneutics, Phenomenology, and Practical Philosophy 3.2 (2011): 249-267.
  • Barbee, Harry, and Douglas Schrock. “Un/Gendering social selves: How nonbinary people navigate and experience a binarily gendered world.” Sociological Forum. Vol. 34. No. 3. 2019.
  • Barrett, Michael, and Eivor Oborn. “Boundary object use in cross-cultural software development teams.” Human Relations 63.8 (2010): 1199-1221.
  • Bittner, Amanda, and Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant. “Sex isn’t gender: Reforming concepts and measurements in the study of public opinion.” Political Behavior 39.4 (2017): 1019-1041.
  • Bittner, Amanda, and Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant. “Digging deeper into the gender gap: Gender salience as a moderating factor in political attitudes.” Canadian Journal of Political Science/Revue canadienne de science politique 50.2 (2017): 559-578.
  • Beauchamp, Toby, and Benjamin D’Harlingue. “Beyond additions and exceptions: The category of transgender and new pedagogical approaches for women’s studies.” Feminist Formations (2012): 25-51.
  • Beauchamp, Toby Cason. “When Things Don’t Add Up: Transgender Bodies and the Mobile Borders of Biometrics.” In Trans Studies: The Challenge to Hetero/Homo Normativities. Rutgers University Press, 2016. 103-112.
  • Bechky, Beth A. “Sharing meaning across occupational communities: The transformation of understanding on a production floor.” Organization science 14.3 (2003): 312-330.
  • Bechky, Beth A. “Gaffers, gofers, and grips: Role-based coordination in temporary organizations.” Organization science 17.1 (2006): 3-21.
  • Benda, Libor. “Inevitability, contingency, and the epistemic significance of time.” Time & Society (2020): 0961463X20951679.
  • Benjamin, Ruha. “Informed refusal: Toward a justice-based bioethics.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 41.6 (2016): 967-990.
  • Bilge, Sirma. “The fungibility of intersectionality: an Afropessimist reading.” Ethnic and Racial Studies (2020): 1-29.
  • Blashfield, Roger K., et al. “The cycle of classification: DSM-I through DSM-5.” Annual review of clinical psychology 10 (2014): 25-51.
  • Bonilla-Silva, Eduardo. “Feeling race: Theorizing the racial economy of emotions.” American Sociological Review 84.1 (2019): 1-25.
  • Booth, W. James. “Communities of memory: On identity, memory, and debt.” American Political Science Review (1999): 249-263.
  • Brockmeier, Jens. “Stories to remember: Narrative and the time of memory.” Storyworlds: A Journal of Narrative Studies 1 (2009): 115-132.
  • Browne, Victoria. “Backlash, repetition, untimeliness: the temporal dynamics of feminist politics.” Hypatia 28.4 (2013): 905-920.
  • Cajander, Åsa, and Christiane Grünloh. “Electronic health records are more than a work tool: conflicting needs of direct and indirect stakeholders.” Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 2019.
  • Cassino, Dan, and Yasemin Besen-Cassino. “Political identity, gender identity or both? The political effects of sexual orientation and gender identity items in survey research.” European Journal of Politics and Gender (2020).
  • Christin, Angèle. “The ethnographer and the algorithm: beyond the black box.” Theory and Society (2020): 1-22.
  • Conrad, Kathryn. “Surveillance, gender, and the virtual body in the information age.” Surveillance & Society 6.4 (2009): 380-387.
  • Constantinides, Panos, Mike W. Chiasson, and Lucas D. Introna. “The ends of information systems research: A pragmatic framework.” MIS Quarterly (2012): 1-20.
  • Cratsley, Kelso. “The Ethical and Empirical Status of Dimensional Diagnosis: Implications for Public Mental Health?.” Neuroethics 12.2 (2019): 183-199.
  • Cushing, Simon. “Has Autism Changed?.” The Social Constructions and Experiences of Madness. Brill Rodopi, 2018. 75-94.
  • Dowers, Eden, et al. “Transgender experiences of occupation and the environment: A scoping review.” Journal of Occupational Science 26.4 (2019): 496-510.
  • Dowers, Eden, and Kalen Eshin. “Subjective Experiences of a Cisgender/Transgender Dichotomy: Implications for Occupation-Focused Research.” OTJR: Occupation, Participation and Health (2020): 1539449220909102.
  • Draz, Marie. “On Gender Neutrality: Derrida and Transfeminism in Conversation.” PhiloSOPHIA 7.1 (2017): 91-98.
  • Dutta, Aniruddha, and Raina Roy. “Decolonizing transgender in India: Some reflections.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 1.3 (2014): 320-337.
  • Eckstein, Ace J. “Out of Sync: Complex Temporality in Transgender Men’s YouTube Transition Channels.” QED: A Journal in GLBTQ Worldmaking 5.1 (2018): 24-47.
  • Eder, Sandra. “The Volatility of Sex: Intersexuality, Gender and Clinical Practice in the 1950s.” Gender & History 22.3 (2010): 692-707.
  • Engstrand, Åsa-Karin, and Cecilia Enberg. “The power in positionings: A Foucauldian approach to knowledge integration processes.” Management Learning (2020): 1350507620904307.
  • Favre, Maroussia, Brendon Swedlow, and Marco Verweij. “A cultural theory and model of power relations.” Journal of Political Power 12.2 (2019): 245-275.
  • Fischer, Clara Cecilia. “Pragmatists, Deliberativists, and Democracy: The Quest for Inclusion.” The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 26.3 (2012): 497-515.
  • Fleming, Peter, and André Spicer. “Power in management and organization science.” Academy of Management Annals 8.1 (2014): 237-298.
  • Fotaki, Marianna, Kate Kenny, and Sheena J. Vachhani. “Thinking critically about affect in organization studies: Why it matters.” Organization 24.1 (2017): 3-17.
  • Friedman, Jonathan. “The past in the future: history and the politics of identity.” American anthropologist 94.4 (1992): 837-859.
  • Gherardi, Silvia. “Theorizing affective ethnography for organization studies.” Organization 26.6 (2019): 741-760.
  • Giladi, Paul. “The Agent in Pain: Alienation and Discursive Abuse.” International Journal of Philosophical Studies (2020): 1-21.
  • Glover, Robert W. “Games without frontiers? Democratic engagement, agonistic pluralism and the question of exclusion.” Philosophy & Social Criticism 38.1 (2012): 81-104.
  • Hayward, Clarissa Rile, and Ron Watson. “Identity and political theory.” Washington University Journal of Law and Policy 33 (2010): 9.
  • Hemmings, Clare. “Affective solidarity: Feminist reflexivity and political transformation.” Feminist Theory 13.2 (2012): 147-161.
  • Hirschman, Daniel, and Emily Adlin Bosk. “Standardizing biases: Selection devices and the quantification of Race.” Sociology of Race and Ethnicity (2017): 2332649219844797.
  • Hong, Jacky FL, and Fiona KH O. “Conflicting identities and power between communities of practice: The case of IT outsourcing.” Management Learning 40.3 (2009): 311-326.
  • Horak, Laura. “Trans on YouTube: Intimacy, visibility, temporality.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 1.4 (2014): 572-585.
  • Hyman, Steven E. “The diagnosis of mental disorders: The problem of reification”. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology 6 (2010): 155-179
  • Irvine, Janice M. “Transient feelings: Sex panics and the politics of emotions.” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 14.1 (2008): 1-40.
  • Jackson-Perry, David. “The Autistic Art of Failure? Unknowing Imperfect Systems of Sexuality and Gender.” Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research 22.1 (2020).
  • Jaggar, Alison M. “Love and knowledge: Emotion in feminist epistemology.” Inquiry 32.2 (1989): 151-176.
  • Kahan, Benjamin. “The unexpected American origins of sexology and sexual science: Elizabeth Osgood Goodrich Willard, Orson Squire Fowler, and the scientification of sex.” History of the Human Sciences (2020): 0952695120910051.
  • Katyal, Sonia. “Exporting Identity.” Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 14 (2002): 97.
  • Leonardi, Paul M., Diane E. Bailey, and Casey S. Pierce. “The coevolution of objects and boundaries over time: materiality, affordances, and boundary salience.” Information Systems Research 30.2 (2019): 665-686.
  • Levina, Natalia, and Emmanuelle Vaast. “Innovating or doing as told? Status differences and overlapping boundaries in offshore collaboration.” MIS quarterly (2008): 307-332.
  • Liu, James H., and Denis J. Hilton. “How the past weighs on the present: Social representations of history and their role in identity politics.” British Journal of Social Psychology 44.4 (2005): 537-556.
  • Lund, Ragnhild. “Researching crisis—recognizing the unsettling experience of emotions.” Emotion, Space and Society 5.2 (2012): 94-102.
  • McGivern, Gerry, and Sue Dopson. “Inter-epistemic power and transforming knowledge objects in a biomedical network.” Organization Studies 31.12 (2010): 1667-1686.
  • McKinzie, Ashleigh E., and Patricia L. Richards. “An argument for context‐driven intersectionality.” Sociology Compass 13.4 (2019): e12671.
  • Melo, Sara, and Simon Bishop. “Translating healthcare research evidence into practice: The role of linked boundary objects.” Social Science & Medicine 246 (2020): 112731.
  • Miller, Brandon. “YouTube as educator: A content analysis of issues, themes, and the educational value of transgender-created online videos.” Social Media+ Society 3.2 (2017): 2056305117716271.
  • Morris, Jonathan, Catherine Farrell, and Mike Reed. “The indeterminacy of ‘temporariness’: Control and power in neo-bureaucratic organizations and work in UK television.” Human Relations 69.12 (2016): 2274-2297.
  • Mount, Liz. ““I Am Not a Hijra”: Class, Respectability, and the Emergence of the “New” Transgender Woman in India.” Gender & Society 34.4 (2020): 620-647.
  • Narayan, Uma. “Working together across difference: Some considerations on emotions and political practice.” Hypatia 3.2 (1988): 31-48.
  • Nordby, Halvor. “Medical explanations and lay conceptions of disease and illness in doctor–patient interaction.” Theoretical medicine and bioethics 29.6 (2008): 357-370.
  • Ogbonnaya-Ogburu, Ihudiya Finda, et al. “Critical Race Theory for HCI.” Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 2020.
  • Passi, Samir, and Phoebe Sengers. “Making data science systems work.” Big Data & Society 7.2 (2020): 2053951720939605.
  • Pihlainen, Kalle. “On historical consciousness and popular pasts.” História da Historiografia: International Journal of Theory and History of Historiography 7.15 (2014): 10-26.
  • Pozzebon, Marlei, and Alain Pinsonneault. “The dynamics of client-consultant relationships: exploring the interplay of power and knowledge.” Journal of Information Technology 27.1 (2012): 35-56.
  • Pretsell, Douglas. “The evolution of the questionnaire in German sexual science: A methodological narrative.” History of Science 58.3 (2020): 326-349.
  • Prochuk, Alana. “From the Monster to the Kid Next Door: Transgender Children, Cisgender Parents, and the Management of Difference on TV.” Atlantis: Critical Studies in Gender, Culture & Social Justice 36.2 (2014): 36-48.
  • Reardon, Jenny. “The democratic, anti-racist genome? Technoscience at the limits of liberalism.” Science as Culture 21.1 (2012): 25-47.
  • Richie, Cristina S. “Not Sick: Liberal, Trans, and Crip Feminist Critiques of Medicalization.” Journal of bioethical inquiry 16.3 (2019): 375-387.
  • Roen, Katrina. “” Either/Or” and” Both/Neither”: Discursive Tensions in Transgender Politics.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 27.2 (2002): 501-522.
  • de Saint-Laurent, Constance, et al. “Collective memory and social sciences in the post-truth era.” Culture & Psychology (2017): 147-155.
  • de Saint-Laurent, Constance, and Sandra Obradović. “Uses of the Past: History as a Resource for the Present.” Integrative Psychological and Behavioral Science 53.1 (2019): 1-13.
  • Sebastian, Melinda. “Instagram and Gendered Surveillance: Ways of Seeing the Hashtag.” Surveillance & Society 17.1/2 (2019): 40-45.
  • Shotwell, Alexis. “Implicit knowledge: How it is understood and used in feminist theory.” *Philosophy Compass * 9.5 (2014): 315-324.
  • Simpson, Audra. “On ethnographic refusal: Indigeneity, ‘voice’and colonial citizenship.” Junctures: The Journal for Thematic Dialogue 9 (2007).
  • Simpson, Audra. “Consent’s revenge.” Cultural Anthropology 31.3 (2016): 326-333.
  • Skinner, David. “‘The NDNAD has no ability in itself to be discriminatory’: Ethnicity and the governance of the UK National DNA Database.” Sociology 47.5 (2013): 976-992.
  • Starke, Georg, et al. “Computing schizophrenia: ethical challenges for machine learning in psychiatry.” Psychological Medicine s (2020): 1-7.
  • Stjerne, Iben Sandal, Jonas Söderlund, and Dana Minbaeva. “Crossing times: Temporal boundary-spanning practices in interorganizational projects.” International Journal of Project Management 37.2 (2019): 347-365.
  • Sumerau, J. E. “A Tale of Three Spectrums: Deviating from Normative Treatments of Sex and Gender.” Deviant Behavior 41.7 (2020): 893-904.
  • Sumerau, J. E., Lain AB Mathers, and Dawne Moon. “Foreclosing Fluidity at the Intersection of Gender and Sexual Normativities.” Symbolic Interaction 43.2 (2020): 205-234.
  • Tekin, Şerife. “Self-concept through the diagnostic looking glass: Narratives and mental disorder.” Philosophical Psychology 24.3 (2011): 357-380.
  • Towle, Evan B., and Lynn Marie Morgan. “Romancing the transgender native: rethinking the use of the” third gender” concept.” GLQ: A journal of lesbian and gay studies 8.4 (2002): 469-497.
  • Townley, Cynthia. “Toward a revaluation of ignorance.” Hypatia 21.3 (2006): 37-55.
  • Trafford, James. “Reason and power: Difference, structural implication, and political transformation.” Contemporary Political Theory 18.2 (2019): 227-247.
  • Wakefield, Jerome C. “False positives in psychiatric diagnosis: implications for human freedom.” Theoretical medicine and bioethics 31.1 (2010): 5-17.
  • Washington, Peter, et al. “Data-driven diagnostics and the potential of mobile artificial intelligence for digital therapeutic phenotyping in computational psychiatry.” Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging (2019).
  • Weiss, Erica. “Refusal as act, refusal as abstention.” Cultural Anthropology 31.3 (2016): 351-358.
  • Yelvington, Kevin A. “History, memory and identity: A programmatic prolegomenon.” Critique of Anthropology 22.3 (2002): 227-256.
  • Yuval-Davis, Nira. “Dialogical epistemology—An intersectional resistance to the “oppression olympics”.” Gender & society 26.1 (2012): 46-54.