Stuff I've been reading (December 2019)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in December 2019:

Books

  • Ásta. Categories We Live by: The Construction of Sex, Gender, Race, and Other Social Categories. Oxford University Press, 2018.
  • Anderson, Margo, and Stephen E. Fienberg. Who counts?: The politics of census-taking in contemporary America. Russell Sage Foundation, 1999.
  • Arora, Payal. The next billion users: Digital life beyond the West. Harvard University Press, 2019.
  • Bunn, Geoffrey C. The truth machine: A social history of the lie detector. JHU Press, 2012.
  • Canaday, Margot. The straight state: Sexuality and citizenship in twentieth-century America. Princeton University Press, 2009.
  • Ellcessor, Elizabeth. Restricted access: Media, disability, and the politics of participation. NYU Press, 2016.
  • Epstein, Steven. Inclusion: The politics of difference in medical research. University of Chicago Press, 2008.
  • Grue, Jan. Disability and discourse analysis. Routledge, 2016.
  • Hacking, Ian. The social construction of what?. Harvard University Press, 1999.
  • Hickman, Larry A. John Dewey’s pragmatic technology. Indiana University Press, 1990.
  • Igo, Sarah E. The averaged American: Surveys, citizens, and the making of a mass public. Harvard University Press, 2007.
  • Leonelli, Sabina. Data-centric biology: A philosophical study. University of Chicago Press, 2016.
  • MacKenzie, Donald A. Inventing accuracy: A historical sociology of nuclear missile guidance. MIT Press, 1993.
  • Mills, Charles W. Blackness visible: Essays on philosophy and race. Cornell University Press, 1998.
  • Mol, Annemarie. The body multiple: Ontology in medical practice. Duke University Press, 2002.
  • Schwartzman, Lisa H. Challenging liberalism: Feminism as political critique. Penn State Press, 2006.
  • TallBear, Kim. Native American DNA: Tribal belonging and the false promise of genetic science. University of Minnesota Press, 2013.
  • Thylstrup, Nanna Bonde. The Politics of Mass Digitization. MIT Press, 2019.
  • Young, Iris Marion. Responsibility for justice. Oxford University Press, 2010.

Papers and Chapters

  • Belek, Ben. “I Feel, Therefore I Matter: Emotional Rhetoric and Autism Self-Advocacy.” Anthropology Now 9.2 (2017): 57-69.
  • Bertilsdotter Rosqvist, Hanna. “The politics of joking: Narratives of humour and joking among adults with Asperger’s syndrome.” Disability & Society 27.2 (2012): 235-247.
  • Boumans, Marcel J., and Sabina Leonelli. “From Dirty Data to Tidy Facts: Clustering Practices in Plant Phenomics and Business Cycle Analysis.” Varieties of Data Journeys. Springer (2019).
  • Bunn, Geoffrey C. “Spectacular science: The lie detector’s ambivalent powers.” History of psychology 10.2 (2007): 156.
  • Cage, Eilidh, Jessica Di Monaco, and Victoria Newell. “Understanding, attitudes and dehumanisation towards autistic people.” Autism 23.6 (2019): 1373-13183.
  • Carlson, Matt. “News Algorithms, Photojournalism and the Assumption of Mechanical Objectivity in Journalism.” Digital Journalism (2019): 1-17.
  • Congdon, Matthew. ““Knower” as an Ethical Concept: From Epistemic Agency to Mutual Recognition.” Feminist Philosophy Quarterly 4.4 (2018).
  • Cusick, Carolyn M. “Testifying Bodies: Testimonial Injustice as Derivatization.” Social Epistemology 33.2 (2019): 111-123.
  • Demo, Anne Teresa. “Hacking agency: Apps, autism, and neurodiversity.” Quarterly Journal of Speech 103.3 (2017): 277-300.
  • DeVidi, David. “Advocacy, Autism and Autonomy.” The Philosophy of Autism (2008): 187-200.
  • Dindar, Katja, Anne Lindblom, and Eija Kärnä. “The construction of communicative (in) competence in autism: a focus on methodological decisions.” Disability & Society 32.6 (2017): 868-891.
  • Dixon-Román, Ezekiel J., Ama Nyame-Mensah, and Allison R. Russell. “Algorithmic Legal Reasoning as Racializing Assemblage.” Computational Cultures (2019).
  • Fiske, Amelia, Barbara Prainsack, and Alena Buyx. “Data work: meaning-making in the era of data-rich medicine.” Journal of medical Internet research 21.7 (2019): e11672.
  • Fiske, John. “Surveilling the city: Whiteness, the black man and democratic totalitarianism.” Theory, Culture & Society 15.2 (1998): 67-88.
  • Fitsch, Hannah, and Kathrin Friedrich. “Digital Matters: Processes of Normalization in Medical Imaging.” Catalyst: Feminism, Theory, Technoscience 4.2 (2018).
  • Fletcher-Watson, Sue, and Geoffrey Bird. “Autism and empathy: What are the real links?.” Autism (2019): 1362361319883506.
  • Floridi, L., Cowls, J., Beltrametti, M., Chatila, R., Chazerand, P., Dignum, V., Luetge, C., Madelin, R., Pagallo, U., Rossi, F. and Schafer, B., 2018. AI4People—An ethical framework for a good AI society: opportunities, risks, principles, and recommendations. Minds and Machines, 28(4), pp.689-707.
  • Gibson, Margaret. “The truth machine: Polygraphs, popular culture and the confessing body.” Social Semiotics 11.1 (2001): 61-73.
  • Horton, John. “Rawls, public reason and the limits of liberal justification.” Contemporary political theory 2.1 (2003): 5-23.
  • Jobin, Anna, Marcello Ienca, and Effy Vayena. “The global landscape of AI ethics guidelines.” Nature Machine Intelligence 1.9 (2019): 389-399.
  • Johnson, Jenell. “Negotiating autism in an epidemic of discourse.” Disability Studies Quarterly 33.2 (2013).
  • Kapp, Steven K., et al. “‘People should be allowed to do what they like’: Autistic adults’ views and experiences of stimming.” Autism (2019): 1362361319829628.
  • Kapp, Steven. “How social deficit models exacerbate the medical model: autism as case in point.” Autism Policy & Practice 2.1 (2019): 3-28.
  • Kennett, Jeanette. “Autism, empathy and moral agency.” The Philosophical Quarterly 52.208 (2002): 340-357.
  • Koesten, Laura, et al. “Everything you always wanted to know about a dataset: studies in data summarisation.” International Journal of Human-Computer Studies 135 (2020): 102367.
  • Korsgaard, Christine M. “The normative constitution of agency.” Rational and social agency: The philosophy of Michael Bratman (2014): 190-214.
  • Lane, Rhiannon. (2019), Expanding boundaries in psychiatry: uncertainty in the context of diagnosis‐seeking and negotiation. Sociology of Health & Illness
  • Laukyte, Migle. “Against Human Exceptionalism: Environmental Ethics and the Machine.” On the Cognitive, Ethical, and Scientific Dimensions of Artificial Intelligence: Themes from IACAP 2016 134 (2019): 325.
  • Mauthner, Natasha S. “Toward a Posthumanist Ethics of Qualitative Research in a Big Data Era.” American Behavioral Scientist 63.6 (2019): 669-698.
  • McConkey, Jane. “Knowledge and acknowledgement:‘epistemic injustice’as a problem of recognition.” Politics 24.3 (2004): 198-205.
  • Milton, D. E., and Mike Bracher. “Autistics speak but are they heard.” Journal of the BSA Medsoc Group 7 (2013): 61-69.
  • Milton, Damian EM. “Disposable dispositions: reflections upon the work of Iris Marion Young in relation to the social oppression of autistic people.” Disability & Society 31.10 (2016): 1403-1407.
  • Moser, Ingunn. “Disability and the promises of technology: Technology, subjectivity and embodiment within an order of the normal.” Information, Communication & Society 9.3 (2006): 373-395.
  • Numerico, Teresa. “Politics and Epistemology of Big Data: A Critical Assessment.” On the Cognitive, Ethical, and Scientific Dimensions of Artificial Intelligence. Springer, Cham, 2019. 147-166.
  • Pasquetto, Irene V., Christine L. Borgman, and Morgan F. Wofford. “Uses and Reuses of Scientific Data: The Data Creators’ Advantage.” Harvard Data Science Review (2019).
  • Reddington, Sarah, and Deborah Price. “Cyborg and autism: exploring new social articulations via posthuman connections.” International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 29.7 (2016): 882-892.
  • Rosenbaum, Howard, and Pnina Fichman. “Algorithmic accountability and digital justice: A critical assessment of technical and sociotechnical approaches.” Proceedings of the Association for Information Science and Technology 56.1 (2019): 237-244.
  • Saunders, Pamela. “Neurodivergent Rhetorics: Examining Competing Discourses of Autism Advocacy in the Public Sphere.” Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies 12.1 (2018): 1-17.
  • Schinzel, Britta. “De-gendering neuro-images: Contingencies in the construction of visualization technologies and their use for establishing sex-differences.” Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 36.2 (2011): 168-179.
  • Scroggins, Michael J., et al. “Thorny Problems in Data (-Intensive) Science.” (2019).
  • Sim, G. (2019). ‘How can you not be romantic about baseball?’ Or how we are platonic about data. Convergence. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354856519890611
  • Solomon, Olga. “Sense and the Senses: Anthropology and the Study of Autism.” Annual Review of Anthropology 39 (2010): 241-259.
  • Solomon, Olga. “But-he’ll fall!”: Children with autism, interspecies intersubjectivity, and the problem of ‘being social.” Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 39.2 (2015): 323-344.
  • Srinivasan, Amia. “Philosophy and Ideology.” THEORIA. An International Journal for Theory, History and Foundations of Science 31.3 (2016): 371-380.
  • Srinivasan, Amia. “Genealogy, Epistemology and Worldmaking.” Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society. Vol. 119. No. 2. Oxford University Press, 2019.
  • Stock, Barbara. “Mixed messages: Validity and ethics of facilitated communication.” Disability Studies Quarterly 31.4 (2011).
  • Sveinsdóttir, Ásta. “Categorical Injustice.” Journal of Social Philosophy (2019).
  • Waidzunas, Tom, and Steven Epstein. “‘For men arousal is orientation’: Bodily truthing, technosexual scripts, and the materialization of sexualities through the phallometric test.” Social Studies of Science 45.2 (2015): 187-213.
  • Walters, Shannon. “Autistic ethos at work: Writing on the spectrum in contexts of professional and technical communication.” Disability Studies Quarterly 31.3 (2011).
  • Waltz, Mitzi. “Metaphors of autism, and autism as metaphor: an exploration of representation.” Second Global Conference. Inter-Disciplinary. Net. 2003.
  • Yergeau, Melanie. “Clinically significant disturbance: On theorists who theorize theory of mind.” Disability Studies Quarterly 33.4 (2013).
  • Yergeau, Melanie. “Circle wars: Reshaping the typical autism essay.” Disability Studies Quarterly 30.1 (2009).
  • Yergeau, Melanie. “Occupying autism: Rhetoric, involuntarity, and the meaning of autistic lives.” Occupying disability: Critical approaches to community, justice, and decolonizing disability. Springer, Dordrecht, 2016. 83-95.