Stuff I've been reading (February 2021)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in February 2021:

Books

  • Anderson, Elizabeth. Private Government. Princeton University Press, 2019.
  • Code, Lorraine. What can she know?: feminist theory and the construction of knowledge. Cornell University Press, 1991.
  • Davis, Georgiann. Contesting intersex: The dubious diagnosis. NYU Press, 2015.
  • Drabek, Matt L. Classify and label: The unintended marginalization of social groups. Lexington Books, 2014.
  • Dreyfus, Hubert L., and Paul Rabinow. Michel Foucault: Beyond structuralism and hermeneutics. University of Chicago Press, 2014.
  • Fuss, Diana. Essentially speaking: Feminism, nature and difference. Routledge, 2013.
  • Hall, Stuart, and Paul Du Gay, eds. Questions of Cultural Identity. Sage, 1996.
  • Herdt, Gilbert, ed. Moral panics, sex panics: Fear and the fight over sexual rights. Vol. 8. NYU Press, 2009.
  • Heyes, Cressida J., ed. The grammar of politics: Wittgenstein and political philosophy. Cornell University Press, 2003.
  • Hollis, Martin, and Steven Lukes. Rationality and relativism. MIT Press, 1982.
  • Kando, Thomas. Sex change: The achievement of gender identity among feminized transsexuals. Charles C. Thomas Publisher, 1973.
  • Lakoff, Andrew. Pharmaceutical reason: Knowledge and value in global psychiatry. Cambridge University Press, 2006.
  • Meyers, Diana T., ed. Feminists rethink the self. Routledge, 1997.
  • Peters, Julie Elizabeth. A feminist post-transsexual autoethnography: Challenging normative gender coercion. Routledge, 2018.
  • Rose, Nikolas S. Governing the soul: The shaping of the private self. Vol. 2. London: Free association books, 1999.
  • Stein, Edward, ed. Forms of desire: Sexual orientation and the social constructionist controversy. Vol. 642. Psychology Press, 1992.
  • Stone, Amy L., and Jaime Cantrell, eds. Out of the closet, into the archives: Researching sexual histories. SUNY Press, 2015.
  • Taylor, Charles. The ethics of authenticity. Harvard University Press, 1992.
  • Weiss, Robert S. Learning from strangers: The art and method of qualitative interview studies. Simon and Schuster, 1995.

Papers and Chapters

  • Best, Latrica, and W. Carson Byrd. “All Marked-Up in the Genetic Era: Race and Ethnicity as “Floating Signifiers” in Genetic and Genomic Research.” In Genetics, Health and Society. Emerald Group Publishing Limited, 2015.
  • Birhane, Abeba. “Algorithmic injustice: a relational ethics approach.” Patterns 2.2 (2021): 100205.
  • Brigandt, Ingo, and Esther Rosario. “Strategic Conceptual Engineering for Epistemic and Social Aims.” In Conceptual Engineering and Conceptual Ethics. Oxford University Press 100-124.
  • Broderick, Alicia A., and Robin Roscigno. “Autism, inc.: The autism industrial complex.” Journal of Disability Studies in Education 1.aop (2021): 1-25.
  • Brown, Shea, Jovana Davidovic, and Ali Hasan. “The algorithm audit: Scoring the algorithms that score us.” Big Data & Society 8.1 (2021): 2053951720983865.
  • Butler, Judith. “Doing justice to someone: Sex reassignment and allegories of transsexuality.” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 7.4 (2001): 621-636.
  • Campbell, Jason St John Oliver, and Chioke I’Anson. “Beyond gender essentialism and the social and construction of gender: Redefining the conception of gender through a reinvestigation of transgender theory.” International studies in philosophy 39.1 (2007): 19-30.
  • Costas, Jana, and Christopher Grey. “The temporality of power and the power of temporality: Imaginary future selves in professional service firms.” Organization Studies 35.6 (2014): 909-937.
  • Díaz‐León, E. “Substantive metaphysical debates about gender and race: Verbal disputes and metaphysical deflationism.” Journal of Social Philosophy (2021).
  • Doan, Michael D. “Epistemic injustice and epistemic redlining.” Ethics and Social Welfare 11.2 (2017): 177-190.
  • Dore, Ian. “Doing knowing ethically–where social work values meet critical realism.” Ethics and Social Welfare 13.4 (2019): 377-391.
  • D’Emilio, John. “Making and unmaking minorities: The tensions between gay politics and history.” NYU Review of Law & Social Change 14 (1986): 915.
  • Fassin, Didier, and Estelle d’Halluin. “The truth from the body: medical certificates as ultimate evidence for asylum seekers.” American anthropologist 107.4 (2005): 597-608.
  • Folkers, Andreas. “Daring the truth: Foucault, parrhesia and the genealogy of critique.” Theory, Culture & Society 33.1 (2016): 3-28.
  • Galdon Clavell, Gemma, et al. “Auditing algorithms: On lessons learned and the risks of data minimization.” Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society. 2020.
  • Heikkinen, Sakari, Jussi Silvonen, and Hannu Simola. “Technologies of Truth: peeling Foucault’s triangular onion.” Discourse: studies in the cultural politics of education 20.1 (1999): 141-157.
  • Hull, Gordon. “The Banality of Cynicism: Foucault and the Limits of Authentic Parrhēsia.” Foucault Studies (2018): 251-273.
  • Kalulé, Peter. “On the Undecidability of Legal and Technological Regulation.” Law and Critique 30.2 (2019): 137-158.
  • Khalidi, Muhammad Ali. “Etiological Kinds.” Philosophy of Science (2021).
  • Koopman, Colin. “Conceptual Analysis for Genealogical Philosophy: How to Study the History of Practices after Foucault and Wittgenstein.” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 55 (2017): 103-121.
  • Kotliar, Dan M. “Data orientalism: on the algorithmic construction of the non-Western other.” Theory and Society 49.5 (2020): 919-939.
  • Kuziemski, Maciej, and Gianluca Misuraca. “AI governance in the public sector: Three tales from the frontiers of automated decision-making in democratic settings.” Telecommunications policy 44.6 (2020): 101976.
  • Laimann, Jessica. “Capricious kinds.” The British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 71.3 (2020): 1043-1068.
  • Lorenzini, Daniele. “Foucault, Regimes of Truth and the Making of the Subject.” In Foucault and the Making of Subjects (2016): 63-75.
  • Maxwell, Lida. “The politics and gender of truth-telling in Foucault’s lectures on parrhesia.” Contemporary Political Theory 18.1 (2019): 22-42.
  • McKitrick, Jennifer. “Gender identity disorder.” In Establishing Medical Reality. Springer, Dordrecht, 2007. 137-148.
  • Meloni, Maurizio. “A postgenomic body: histories, genealogy, politics.” Body & society 24.3 (2018): 3-38.
  • Nadin, Mihai. “Aiming AI at a moving target: health (or disease).” AI & SOCIETY (2020): 1-9.
  • Naezer, Marijke, et al. “‘We just want the best for this child’: contestations of intersex/DSD and transgender healthcare interventions.” Journal of Gender Studies (2021): 1-14.
  • Pape, Madeleine. “Co-production, multiplied: Enactments of sex as a biological variable in US biomedicine.” Social Studies of Science (2021): 0306312720985939.
  • Peters, Michael A. “Wittgenstein/Foucault/Anti-Philosophy: contingency, community, and the ethics of self-cultivation.” Education Philosophy and Theory (2020): 1-6.
  • Petersen, Alan, and Kiran Pienaar. “Testing for Life? Regimes of Governance in Diagnosis and Screening.” Science, Technology and Society (2021): 0971721820964889.
  • Plant, Bob. “The confessing animal in Foucault and Wittgenstein.” Journal of Religious Ethics 34.4 (2006): 533-559.
  • Plotkin Amrami, Galia. “How is a new category “born”? On mechanisms of formation, cycles of recognition, and the looping effect of “national trauma”.” Health 22.5 (2018): 413-431.
  • Pyne, Jake. “The governance of gender non-conforming children: A dangerous enclosure.” Annual Review of Critical Psychology 11 (2014): 79-96.
  • Reynolds, Joel Michael. ““What if There’s Something Wrong with Her?”‐How Biomedical Technologies Contribute to Epistemic Injustice in Healthcare.” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 58.1 (2020): 161-185.
  • Richardson, Alan. “What Good is a (Indeed, This) History of Pragmatism?.” Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society: A Quarterly Journal in American Philosophy 49.3 (2013): 405-412.
  • Ryazanov, Arseny A., and Nicholas JS Christenfeld. “The strategic value of essentialism.” Social and Personality Psychology Compass 12.1 (2018): e12370.
  • Sparti, Davide. “Making up People: On Some Looping Effects of the Human Kind-Institutional Reflexivity or Social Control?.” European Journal of Social Theory 4.3 (2001): 331-349.
  • Sveinsdóttir, Ásta Kristjana. “The metaphysics of sex and gender.” In Feminist metaphysics. Springer, Dordrecht, 2011. 47-65.
  • Sveinsdóttir, Ásta Kristjana. “The social construction of human kinds.” Hypatia 28.4 (2013): 716-732.