Stuff I've been reading (August 2022)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in August 2022:

Books and dissertations

  • Ahmed, Sara. Strange encounters: Embodied others in post-coloniality. Routledge, 2013.
  • Barnard, Ian. Sex Panic Rhetorics, Queer Interventions. University of Alabama Press, 2020.
  • Casey, Edward S. Turning emotion inside out: Affective life beyond the subject. Northwestern University Press, 2021.
  • Casper, Monica, and Paisley Currah. Corpus: An interdisciplinary reader on bodies and knowledge. Springer, 2011.
  • Ebeling, Mary FE. Afterlives of Data: Life and Debt Under Capitalist Surveillance. Univ of California Press, 2022.
  • Dean, Mitchell. Critical and effective histories: Foucault’s methods and historical sociology. Routledge, 2002.
  • Fisher, Jill A., ed. Gender and the science of difference: Cultural politics of contemporary science and medicine. Rutgers University Press, 2011.
  • Fox, Renee C., and Judith P. Swazey. The courage to fail: A social view of organ transplants and dialysis. Transaction Publishers, 1974.
  • Freund, Paul A., ed. Experimentation with Human Subjects. George Braziller, 1969.
  • Garland-Thomson, Rosemarie. Staring: How we look. Oxford University Press, 2009.
  • Garber, Marjorie B. Vested Interests: Cross-Dressing and Cultural Anxiety. Psychology Press, 1997.
  • Hunt, Nancy. Mirror Image: The Odyssey of a Male-to-Female Transsexual. Holt McDougal, 1978.
  • Jasanoff, Sheila. The fifth branch: science advisers as policymakers. Harvard University Press, 1998.
  • Johnson, Austin H., Baker A. Rogers, and Tiffany Taylor, eds. Advances in Trans Studies: Moving Toward Gender Expansion and Trans Hope. Emerald Group Publishing, 2021.
  • Karasic, Dan, and Jack Drescher, eds. Sexual and Gender Diagnoses of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) A Reevaluation. Haworth Press, 2005.
  • Keating, Peter, and Alberto Cambrosio. Biomedical platforms: realigning the normal and the pathological in late-twentieth-century medicine. MIT Press, 2003.
  • Law, John and Mol, Annemarie, eds. Complexities. Duke University Press, 2002. 1-23.
  • Long, Michael G., and Shea Tuttle. Phyllis Frye and the Fight for Transgender Rights. Texas A&M University Press, 2022.
  • Manderson, Lenore. Surface tensions: Surgery, bodily boundaries, and the social self. Routledge, 2016.
  • Migeon, Claude J. and Sera Yoo. Legacy: The Pediatric Endocrine Clinic at The Johns Hopkins Hospital, 1960-2000. Independent, 2019.
  • Nettick, Geri and Elliott, Beth. Mirrors: Portrait of a Lesbian Transsexual. Oakland, CA: CreateSpace, 2011.
  • Schipper, Kellie. Conservative Political Tactics to Obstruct Gender-Affirming Healthcare for Transgender Youth in the USA. Diss. Columbia University, 2022.
  • Strick, Simon. American dolorologies: Pain, sentimentalism, biopolitics. SUNY Press, 2014.
  • Tesh, Sylvia Noble. Hidden arguments: Political ideology and disease prevention policy. Rutgers University Press, 1988.

Papers and Chapters

  • Ashley, Florence. “Adolescent Medical Transition is Ethical: An Analogy with Reproductive Health.” Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 32.2 (2022): 127-171.
  • Aultman, B. Lee. “Injurious acts: Notes on happiness from the trans ordinary.” Writing from Below (2019).
  • Baldino, N. F. “Trans phenomenology: A Merleau-Pontian reclamation of the trans narrative.” Res Cogitans 5 (2015): 29-2015.
  • Bierria, Alisa. “On Love and the Limits of Theory: A Commentary on Gayle Salamon’s The Life & Death of Latisha King: A Critical Phenomenology of Transphobia.” Philosophy Today 66.1 (2022): 207-215.
  • Burke, Megan. “Cis Sense and the Habit of Gender Assignment.” The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 36.2 (2022): 206-218.
  • Carter, Julian. “Normality, Whiteness, Authorship.” In Science and Homosexualities (1997): 155.
  • Case, Mary Anne. “The Role of the Popes in the Invention of Complementarity and the Vatican’s Anathematization of Gender.” Religion and Gender (2016).
  • Chalmers, Matthew, and Ian MacColl. “Seamful and seamless design in ubiquitous computing.” Workshop at the crossroads: The interaction of HCI and systems issues in UbiComp. Vol. 8. 2003.
  • Chalmers, Matthew. “Seamful design and ubicomp infrastructure.” Proceedings of Ubicomp 2003 workshop at the crossroads: The interaction of HCI and systems issues in Ubicomp. 2003.
  • Crasnow, S. J. “The legacy of ‘gender ideology’: Anti-trans legislation and conservative Christianity’s ongoing influence on US law.” Religion and Gender 11.1 (2021): 67-71.
  • Crocq, Marc-Antoine. “How gender dysphoria and incongruence became medical diagnoses–a historical review.” Dialogues in Clinical Neuroscience 23.1 (2021): 44-51.
  • Douglas, Jennifer, et al. “‘These are not just pieces of paper’: Acknowledging grief and other emotions in pursuit of person-centered archives.” Archives & Manuscripts 50.1 (2022).
  • Haider-Markel, Donald, et al. “Morality politics and new research on transgender politics and public policy.” The Forum. Vol. 17. No. 1. De Gruyter, 2019.
  • Hatfield, Joe Edward. “Moments of shame in the figural history of trans suicide.” Cultural Studies (2022): 1-33.
  • Heidenreich, Linda. “Learning from the Death of Gwen Araujo?—Transphobic Racial Subordination and Queer Latina Survival in the Twenty-First Century.” Chicana/Latina Studies 6.1 (2006): 50-86.
  • Heimer, Carol A. “Inert facts and the illusion of knowledge: Strategic uses of ignorance in HIV clinics.” Economy and Society 41.1 (2012): 17-41.
  • Hunt, Mary E. “Catholic gender denial.” Religion and Gender 6.2 (2016): 273-275.
  • Ingiyimbere, Fidèle. “Public reason under the tree: Rawls and the African palaver.” Philosophy & Social Criticism (2022).
  • Lott, Micah. “Restraint on reasons and reasons for restraint: A problem for Rawls’ ideal of public reason.” Pacific Philosophical Quarterly 87.1 (2006).
  • Markle, Gerald E., and Daryl E. Chubin. “Consensus development in biomedicine: the liver transplant controversy.” The Milbank Quarterly (1987): 1-24.
  • Millerand, Florence, et al. “Making an issue out of a standard: Storytelling practices in a scientific community.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 38.1 (2013): 7-43.
  • Minter, Shannon Price. “Déjà vu all over again: The recourse to biology by opponents of transgender equality.” North Carolina Law Review. 95 (2016): 1161.
  • Norton, Jody. ““Brain says you’re a girl, but I think you’re a sissy boy”: Cultural origins of transphobia.” International Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies 2.2 (1997): 139-164.
  • Quong, Jonathan. “On the idea of public reason.” A companion to Rawls (2013): 265-280.
  • Roth, Paul A. “Reflections: on writing and being written about.” Rethinking History (2022): 1-18.
  • Särkelä, Arvi. “Vicious circles: Adorno, Dewey and disclosing critique of society.” Philosophy & Social Criticism (2022): 01914537221117092.
  • Shapiro, Eve. “‘Trans’ cending barriers: Transgender organizing on the internet.” Journal of Gay & Lesbian Social Services 16.3-4 (2004): 165-179.
  • Shook, Alic G., et al. “Age, Autonomy, and Authority of Knowledge: Discursive Constructions of Youth Decision-Making Capacity and Parental Support in Transgender Minors’ Accounts of Healthcare Access.” Journal of Adolescent Research (2022).
  • Slagstad, Ketil. “Bureaucratizing Medicine: Creating a Gender Identity Clinic in the Welfare State.” Isis 113.3 (2022): 469-490.
  • Tang, Cynthia L., and Thomas Schlich. “Surgical innovation and the multiple meanings of randomized controlled trials: the first RCT on minimally invasive cholecystectomy (1980–2000).” Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences 72.2 (2017): 117-141.
  • Urueña, Sergio. “Anticipation and modal power: Opening up and closing down the momentum of sociotechnical systems.” Social Studies of Science (2022): 03063127221111469.
  • Vaahtera, Touko. “The Real Body and the Repressive Hypothesis of the Body.” In Biopolitics of Swimming and the Re-articulation of Able-Bodiedness. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2022. 71-96.
  • Vähäpassi, Valo. “User-generated reality enforcement: Framing violence against black trans feminine people on a video sharing site.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 26.1 (2019): 85-98.
  • Vertesi, Janet. “Seamful spaces: Heterogeneous infrastructures in interaction.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 39.2 (2014): 264-284.
  • Wadmann, Sarah, and Klaus Hoeyer. “Beyond the ‘therapeutic misconception’: Research, care and moral friction.” BioSocieties 9.1 (2014): 3-23.
  • Weithman, Paul J. “John Rawls’s Idea of Public Reason: Two Questions.” Journal of Law, Philosophy & Culture 1 (2007): 47.
  • White, Daniel, and Hirofumi Katsuno. “Artificial emotional intelligence beyond East and West.” Internet Policy Review 11.1 (2022): 1-17.
  • Wiggins, Tobias BD. “Do Psychoanalysts Dream of Polymorphous Sleep?: Clinical Desiring With Transgender Subjects.” Studies in Gender and Sexuality 23.2 (2022): 146-162.
  • Woolgar, Steve, and Dorothy Pawluch. “Ontological gerrymandering: The anatomy of social problems explanations.” Social problems 32.3 (1985): 214-227
  • Wu, Angela Xiao. “The Ambient Politics of Affective Computing.” Public Culture (2022).