Stuff I've been reading (January 2020)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in January 2020:

Books

  • Aizura, Aren Z. Mobile Subjects: Transnational Imaginaries of Gender Reassignment. Duke University Press, 2018.
  • Anderson, William C., and Zoe Samudzi. As Black as Resistance: Finding the conditions for liberation. AK Press, 2018.
  • Cetina, Karin Knorr. Epistemic cultures: How the sciences make knowledge. Harvard University Press, 2009.
  • Duarte, Marisa Elena. Network sovereignty: Building the Internet across Indian country. University of Washington Press, 2017.
  • Duberman, Martin. Has the Gay Movement Failed?. University of California Press, 2018.
  • Dumit, Joseph. Picturing personhood: Brain scans and biomedical identity. Princeton University Press, 2004.
  • Ericksen, Julia A., and Sally A. Steffen. Kiss and tell: Surveying sex in the twentieth century. Harvard University Press, 2009.
  • Felski, Rita. The limits of critique. University of Chicago Press, 2015.
  • Fitzgerald, Des. Tracing autism: uncertainty, ambiguity, and the affective labor of neuroscience. University of Washington Press, 2017.
  • Fujimura, Joan H. Crafting science: A sociohistory of the quest for the genetics of cancer. Harvard University Press, 1996.
  • Gill-Peterson, Julian. Histories of the Transgender Child. University of Minnesota Press, 2018.
  • Herzog, Dagmar. Cold War Freud. Cambridge University Press, 2017.
  • Hopkins, Patrick D. Sex/machine: Readings in culture, gender, and technology. Indiana University Press, 1998.
  • Invisible Committee. Now. Semiotext(e), 2018.
  • Joyce, Kelly. Magnetic appeal: MRI and the myth of transparency. Cornell University Press, 2010.
  • Kulick, Don. Travesti: Sex, gender, and culture among Brazilian transgendered prostitutes. University of Chicago Press, 1998.
  • Kutchins, Herb and Kirk, Stuart A. The selling of DSM: The rhetoric of science in psychiatry. Routledge, 2017.
  • Lukes, Steven. Power: A radical view. Macmillan International Higher Education, 2004.
  • McRuer, Robert. Crip theory: Cultural signs of queerness and disability. Vol. 9. NYU press, 2006.
  • Meyerowitz, Joanne J. How sex changed. Harvard University Press, 2009.
  • Mills, Charles W. Black rights/white wrongs: The critique of racial liberalism. Oxford University Press, 2017.
  • Namaste, Viviane K. Oversight: Critical reflections on feminist research and politics. Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2015.
  • Rabinow, Paul. Essays on the Anthropology of Reason. Princeton University Press, 1996.
  • Roberts, Celia. Messengers of sex: hormones, biomedicine and feminism. Cambridge University Press, 2007.
  • Rose, Hilary. Love, power, and knowledge: Towards a feminist transformation of the sciences. Indiana University Press, 1994.
  • Rose, Nikolas. Inventing our selves: Psychology, power, and personhood. Cambridge University Press, 1998.
  • Rose, Nikolas. The Politics of Life Itself: Biomedicine, Power, and Subjectivity in the Twenty-First Century. Princeton University Press, 2009.
  • Salamon, Gayle. Assuming a body: Transgender and rhetorics of materiality. Columbia University Press, 2010.
  • Scott, James C. Seeing like a state: How certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed. Yale University Press, 1998.
  • Scott, James C. Two cheers for anarchism: Six easy pieces on autonomy, dignity, and meaningful work and play. Princeton University Press, 2014.
  • Sedgwick, Eve Kosofsky. Touching feeling: Affect, pedagogy, performativity. Duke University Press, 2003.
  • Valentine, David. Imagining transgender: An ethnography of a category. Duke University Press, 2007.

Papers and Chapters

  • Barabas, Chelsea, et al. “Studying up: reorienting the study of algorithmic fairness around issues of power.” Proceedings of the 2020 Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency. 2020.
  • Bartlett, Andrew, et al. “The locus of legitimate interpretation in Big Data sciences: Lessons for computational social science from-omic biology and high-energy physics.” Big Data & Society 5.1 (2018): 2053951718768831.
  • Berg, Marc. “Of forms, containers, and the electronic medical record: some tools for a sociology of the formal.” Science, technology, & human values 22.4 (1997): 403-433.
  • Bertorelli, Thomas Eugene. “Hope and doubt in the promise of neuroimaging: The case of autism spectrum disorder.” Health: 20.5 (2016): 505-522.
  • Bierria, Alisa. “Missing in action: Violence, power, and discerning agency.” Hypatia 29.1 (2014): 129-145.
  • De Block, Andreas, and Pieter R. Adriaens. “Pathologizing sexual deviance: A history.” Journal of sex research 50.3-4 (2013): 276-298.
  • Bloomfield, Emma Frances. “The rhetoric of energy Darwinism: Neoliberal piety and market autonomy in economic discourse.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 49.4 (2019): 320-341.
  • Bloomfield, Emma Frances, and Denise Tillery. “The Circulation of Climate Change Denial Online: Rhetorical and Networking Strategies on Facebook.” Environmental Communication 13.1 (2019): 23-34.
  • Bowker, Geoffrey C. “Biodiversity datadiversity.” Social studies of science 30.5 (2000): 643-683.
  • Cai, Carrie J., et al. “Human-centered tools for coping with imperfect algorithms during medical decision-making.” Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 2019.
  • Cai, Carrie J., et al. “” Hello AI”: Uncovering the Onboarding Needs of Medical Practitioners for Human-AI Collaborative Decision-Making.” Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 3.CSCW (2019): 1-24.
  • Carlsson, Emilia, et al. “Negotiating knowledge: Parents’ experience of the neuropsychiatric diagnostic process for children with autism.” International journal of language & communication disorders 51.3 (2016): 328-338.
  • Ceccarelli, Leah. “A masterpiece in a new genre: The rhetorical negotiation of two audiences in Schrödinger’s “what is life?”.” Technical Communication Quarterly 3.1 (1994): 7-17.
  • Ceccarelli, Leah. “Manufactured scientific controversy: Science, rhetoric, and public debate.” Rhetoric & Public Affairs 14.2 (2011): 195-228.
  • Chis, Ioana Cerasella. “Big data: A technology of anxiety.” Global Society 29 (2015): 128-47.
  • Clough, Beverley. “Disability and vulnerability: challenging the capacity/incapacity binary.” Social Policy and Society 16.3 (2017): 469-481.
  • Crowe, Marie. “Constructing normality: a discourse analysis of the DSM‐IV.” Journal of Psychiatric and Mental Health Nursing 7.1 (2000): 69-77.
  • Davy, Laura. “Between an Ethic of Care and an Ethic of Autonomy: negotiating relational autonomy, disability, and dependency.” Angelaki 24.3 (2019): 101-114.
  • Diamond, Shaindl. “Trapped in change.” Routledge International Handbook of Critical Mental Health (2017).
  • Drescher, Jack. “I’m your handyman: A history of reparative therapies.” Journal of Homosexuality 36.1 (1998): 19-42.
  • Elish, Madeline Clare. “The stakes of uncertainty: Developing and integrating machine learning in clinical care.” Ethnographic Praxis in Industry Conference Proceedings. Vol. 2018. No. 1. 2018.
  • Elshtain, Jean Bethke. “Kant, politics, & persons: The implications of his moral philosophy.” Polity 14.2 (1981): 205-221.
  • Engel, Nora. “Aligning in the dark: Variable and shifting (user-) settings in developing point-of-care diagnostics for tuberculosis and HIV.” Social Studies of Science (2020): 0306312719900545.
  • Frické, Martin. “Big data and its epistemology.” Journal of the Association for Information Science and Technology 66.4 (2015): 651-661.
  • Friz, Amanda M. “Technologies of the State: Transvaginal Ultrasounds and the Abortion Debate.” Rhetoric and Public Affairs 21.4 (2018): 639-672.
  • Galatzer-Levy, Isaac R., and Robert M. Galatzer-Levy. “The revolution in psychiatric diagnosis: Problems at the foundations.” Perspectives in biology and medicine 50.2 (2007): 161-180.
  • Galis, Vasilis. “Enacting disability: how can science and technology studies inform disability studies?.” Disability & Society 26.7 (2011): 825-838.
  • Goldstein, Zil, Trevor A. Corneil, and Dina N. Greene. “When gender identity doesn’t equal sex recorded at birth: The role of the laboratory in providing effective healthcare to the transgender community.” Clinical chemistry 63.8 (2017): 1342-1352.
  • Halpin, Michael. “Diagnosis, psychiatry and neurology: The case of Huntington Disease.” Social Science & Medicine 73.6 (2011): 858-865.
  • Hamraie, Aimi. “Beyond Accommodation: Disability, Feminist Philosophy, and the Design of Everyday Academic Life.” Philosophia 6.2 (2016): 259-271.
  • Hanssmann, Christoph. “Passing torches? Feminist inquiries and trans-health politics and practices.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 3.1-2 (2016): 120-136.
  • Hayward, Clarissa Rile. “Responsibility and ignorance: On dismantling structural injustice.” The Journal of Politics 79.2 (2017): 396-408.
  • Hollin, Gregory. “Constructing a social subject: Autism and human sociality in the 1980s.” History of the Human Sciences 27.4 (2014): 98-115.
  • Inman, Sarah, and David Ribes. “Data Streams, Data Seams: Toward a seamful representation of data interoperability.” Proceedings of DRS2018 (2018): 35.
  • Jacobs, Delphine, et al. “Implications of an autism spectrum disorder diagnosis: an interview study of how physicians experience the diagnosis in a young child.” Journal of clinical medicine 7.10 (2018): 348.
  • Jaima, Amir R. “Africana Philosophy as Prolegomenon to Any Future American Philosophy.” The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 32.1 (2018): 151-167.
  • Jaima, Amir R. “On the Discursive Orientation toward Whiteness.” Journal of Intercultural Studies 40.2 (2019): 210-224.
  • Jamieson, Dale. “Animal Agency.” The Harvard Review of Philosophy 25 (2018): 111-126.
  • Karter, Justin M. “An Ecological Model for Conceptual Competence in Psychiatric Diagnosis.” Journal of Humanistic Psychology (2019): 0022167819852488.
  • Kirkham, Patrick. “‘The line between intervention and abuse’–autism and applied behaviour analysis.” History of the Human Sciences 30.2 (2017): 107-126.
  • Knutson, Douglas, et al. “Recommendations from transgender healthcare consumers in rural areas.” Transgender health 3.1 (2018): 109-117.
  • Konnoth, Craig. “Medicalization and the new civil rights.” Ethics, Medicine and Public Health 12 (2020): 100435.
  • Latham, J. R. “(Re) making sex: A praxiography of the gender clinic.” Feminist Theory 18.2 (2017): 177-204.
  • Leonelli, Sabina. “What distinguishes data from models?.” European journal for philosophy of science 9.2 (2019): 22.
  • Love, Heather. “Truth and consequences: On paranoid reading and reparative reading.” Criticism 52.2 (2010): 235-241.
  • Mackenzie, Adrian. “The production of prediction: What does machine learning want?.” European Journal of Cultural Studies 18.4-5 (2015): 429-445.
  • Mazzocchi, Fulvio. “Could Big Data be the end of theory in science?.” EMBO reports 16.10 (2015): 1250-1255.
  • McBride III, Lee A. “New Descriptions, New Possibilities.” The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 32.1 (2018): 168-178.
  • Mittelstadt, Brent Daniel, and Luciano Floridi. “The ethics of big data: current and foreseeable issues in biomedical contexts.” Science and engineering ethics 22.2 (2016): 303-341.
  • Mol, Annemarie. “Ontological politics. A word and some questions.” The sociological review 47.1_suppl (1999): 74-89.
  • Moore, Jared. “Towards a more representative politics in the ethics of computer science.” Proceedings of the 2020 Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency. 2020.
  • Moser, Ingunn, and John Law. “Fluids or flows? Information and qualculation in medical practice.” Information Technology & People 19.1 (2006): 55-73.
  • Nelson, Amber D. “Diagnostic dissonance and negotiations of biomedicalisation: mental health practitioners’ resistance to the DSM technology and diagnostic standardisation.” Sociology of health & illness 41.5 (2019): 933-949.
  • Orne, Jason, and James Gall. “Converting, Monitoring, and Policing PrEP Citizenship: Biosexual Citizenship and the PrEP Surveillance Regime.” Surveillance & Society 17.5 (2019): 641-661.
  • Paganoni, Maria Cristina. “Big Data in Discourse.” Framing Big Data. Palgrave Pivot, Cham, 2019. 1-19.
  • Pellizzoni, Luigi. “Metaphors and problematizations. Notes for a research programme on new materialism.” Tecnoscienza: Italian Journal of Science & Technology Studies 5.2 (2015): 73-92.
  • Pryor, Ryan E., and William Vickroy. ““In a Perfect World, You Wouldn’t Have to Work the System to Get the Things You Need to Survive”: A Pilot Study About Trans Health Care Possibilities.” Transgender health 4.1 (2019): 18-23.
  • Ratti, Emanuele. “Phronesis and Automated Science: The Case of Machine Learning and Biology.” in Will Science Remain Human? Springer, 2020.
  • Rawson, K. J. “The Rhetorical Power of Archival Description: Classifying Images of Gender Transgression.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 48.4 (2018): 327-351.
  • Reay, Barry. “Transgender Orgasms.” Feminist Formations 28.2 (2016): 152-161.
  • Reeves, Carol. “Establishing a phenomenon: The rhetoric of early medical reports on AIDS.” Written Communication 7.3 (1990): 393-416.
  • Roller, Cyndi Gale, Carol Sedlak, and Claire Burke Draucker. “Navigating the system: How transgender individuals engage in health care services.” Journal of Nursing Scholarship 47.5 (2015): 417-424.
  • Romelli, Katia, Alessandra Frigerio, and Monica Colombo. “DSM over time: From legitimisation of authority to hegemony.” BioSocieties 11.1 (2016): 1-21.
  • Sanz, Veronica. “No way out of the binary: A critical history of the scientific production of sex.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 43.1 (2017): 1-27.
  • Schleifer, David. “Make me feel mighty real: Gay female-to-male transgenderists negotiating sex, gender, and sexuality.” Sexualities 9.1 (2006): 57-75.
  • Schram, Brian. “Accidental Orientations: Rethinking Queerness in Archival Times.” Surveillance & Society 17.5 (2019): 602-617.
  • Shorter, Edward. “The history of nosology and the rise of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.” Dialogues in clinical neuroscience 17.1 (2015): 59.
  • Seelman, Kristie L., et al. “Transgender noninclusive healthcare and delaying care because of fear: connections to general health and mental health among transgender adults.” Transgender health 2.1 (2017): 17-28.
  • Skidmore, Emily. “Constructing the” Good Transsexual”: Christine Jorgensen, Whiteness, and Heteronormativity in the Mid-Twentieth-Century Press.” Feminist Studies 37.2 (2011): 270-300.
  • Smith, Brian Cantwell. “The limits of correctness.” ACM SIGCAS Computers and Society 14.1, 2, 3, 4 (1985): 18-26.
  • Spade, Dean. “Resisting medicine, re/modeling gender.” Berkeley Women’s Law Journal 18 (2003): 15.
  • Srinivasan, Amia. “The aptness of anger.” Journal of Political Philosophy 26.2 (2018): 123-144.
  • Steinbock, Eliza. “The Early 1990s and Its Afterlives: Transgender Nation Sociality in Digital Activism.” Social Media+ Society 5.4 (2019): 2056305119881693.
  • Stewart, Talia, Y. Angie Lee, and Ella A. Damiano. “Do Transgender and Gender Diverse Individuals Receive Adequate Gynecologic Care? An Analysis of a Rural Academic Center.” Transgender Health (2020).
  • Strand, Michael. “Where do classifications come from? The DSM-III, the transformation of American psychiatry, and the problem of origins in the sociology of knowledge.” Theory and Society 40.3 (2011): 273-313.
  • Succi, Sauro, and Peter V. Coveney. “Big data: the end of the scientific method?.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A 377.2142 (2019): 20180145.
  • Swartz, Sally. “Shrinking: A postmodern perspective on psychiatric case histories.” South African Journal of Psychology 26.3 (1996): 150-156.
  • Swartz, Sally. “Can the clinical subject speak? Some thoughts on subaltern psychology.” Theory & Psychology 15.4 (2005): 505-525.
  • Symons, John, and Ramón Alvarado. “Can we trust Big Data? Applying philosophy of science to software.” Big Data & Society 3.2 (2016): 2053951716664747.
  • Tabb, Kathryn. “Philosophy of psychiatry after diagnostic kinds.” Synthese 196.6 (2019): 2177-2195.
  • Táíwò, Olúfẹmi O. “States Are Not Basic Structures: Against State-Centric Political Theory.” Philosophical Papers 48.1 (2019): 59-82.
  • Treccani, Carloalberto. “How machines see the world: Understanding image annotation.” NECSUS. European journal of media studies 7.1 (2018): 235-254.
  • Tsou, Jonathan Y. “Hacking on the looping effects of psychiatric classifications: What is an interactive and indifferent kind?.” International Studies in the Philosophy of Science 21.3 (2007): 329-344.
  • Tsou, Jonathan Y. “The importance of history for philosophy of psychiatry: The case of the DSM and psychiatric classification.” Journal of the Philosophy of History 5.3 (2011): 446-470.
  • Tsou, Jonathan Y. “DSM-5 and psychiatry’s second revolution: Descriptive vs. theoretical approaches to psychiatric classification.” The DSM-5 in perspective. Springer, Dordrecht, 2015. 43-62.
  • Tsou, Jonathan Y. “Natural kinds, psychiatric classification and the history of the DSM.” History of psychiatry 27.4 (2016): 406-424.
  • Turowetz, Jason, and Douglas W. Maynard. “Category attribution as a device for diagnosis: fitting children to the autism spectrum.” Sociology of health & illness 38.4 (2016): 610-626.
  • Vipond, Evan. “Resisting Transnormativity: challenging the medicalization and regulation of trans bodies.” Theory in Action 8.2 (2015).
  • Warren, Mary Anne. “Moral status.” A companion to applied ethics (2005): 439-450.
  • Wischmeyer, Thomas. “Artificial Intelligence and Transparency: Opening the Black Box.” Regulating Artificial Intelligence. Springer, Cham, 2020. 75-101.
  • Zheng, Robin. “What is my role in changing the system? A new model of responsibility for structural injustice.” Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 21.4 (2018): 869-885.