Stuff I've been reading (January 2021)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in December 2020:

Books

  • Allen, Amy. The politics of our selves: Power, autonomy, and gender in contemporary critical theory. Columbia University Press, 2013.
  • Clough, Sharyn. Beyond epistemology: A pragmatist approach to feminist science studies. Rowman & Littlefield, 2003.
  • Davidson, Arnold Ira. The emergence of sexuality: Historical epistemology and the formation of concepts. Harvard University Press, 2001.
  • Elior, Rachel. Dybbuks and Jewish Women in Social History, Mysticism and Folklore. Urim Publications, 2008.
  • Hier, Sean Patrick, ed. Moral panic and the politics of anxiety. Routledge, 2011.
  • Jaeggi, Rahel. Alienation. Columbia University Press, 2014.
  • Mason, Gail. The spectacle of violence: Homophobia, gender and knowledge. Psychology Press, 2002.
  • Nelson, Hilde Lindemann. Damaged identities, narrative repair. Cornell University Press, 2001.
  • Schilt, Kristen. Just one of the guys?: Transgender men and the persistence of gender inequality. University of Chicago Press, 2010.
  • Westbrook, Laurel. Unlivable Lives: Violence and Identity in Transgender Activism. University of California Press, 2020.

Papers and Chapters

  • Aboim, Sofia. “Fragmented Recognition: Gender Identity between Moral and Legal Spheres.” Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society (2020).
  • Aboim, Sofia. “Gender in a box? The paradoxes of recognition beyond the gender binary.” Politics and Governance 8.3 (2020): 231-241.
  • Amrute, Sareeta. “Of techno-ethics and techno-affects.” Feminist Review 123.1 (2019): 56-73.
  • Armstrong, Natalie. “Overdiagnosis and overtreatment: a sociological perspective on tackling a contemporary healthcare issue.” Sociology of Health & Illness (2020).
  • Bargetz, Brigitte, and Sandrine Sanos. “Feminist matters, critique and the future of the political.” Feminist Theory 21.4 (2020): 501-516.
  • Barley, William C., Paul M. Leonardi, and Diane E. Bailey. “Engineering objects for collaboration: Strategies of ambiguity and clarity at knowledge boundaries.” Human communication research 38.3 (2012): 280-308.
  • Bowman, Melanie. “Privileged Ignorance,“World”-Traveling, and Epistemic Tourism.” Hypatia 35.3 (2020): 475-489.
  • Brown, Wendy. “Wounded attachments.” Political Theory 21.3 (1993): 390-410.
  • de Castillo, Lori Gallegos. “Academic philosophy and the pursuit of genuine dialogue: Embracing radical friction.” The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 32.1 (2018): 92-111.
  • Chadwick, Rachelle. “On the politics of discomfort.” Feminist Theory (2020): 1464700120987379.
  • Chorell, Torbjörn Gustafsson. “Modes of historical attention: wonder, curiosity, fascination.” Rethinking History (2021): 1-16.
  • Clegg, S. R., and Martin Kornberger. “Strategy, Strategizing and Making Things Strategic: Analytics of Power.” In The Cambridge Handbook of Strategy as Practice (2015).
  • Cobbe, Jennifer, and Jatinder Singh. “Reviewable Automated Decision-Making.” Computer Law & Security Review 39 (2020): 105475.
  • El Kassar, Nadja. “The Powers of Individual and Collective Intellectual Self-Trust in Dealing with Epistemic Injustice.” Social Epistemology (2020): 1-13.
  • Fenton, Christopher, and Ann Langley. “Strategy as practice and the narrative turn.” Organization studies 32.9 (2011): 1171-1196.
  • Fernández Romero, Francisco. ““We can conceive another history”: Trans activism around abortion rights in Argentina.” International Journal of Transgender Health (2020): 1-15.
  • Fullwiley, Duana. “The “contemporary synthesis”: When politically inclusive genomic science relies on biological notions of race.” Isis 105.4 (2014): 803-814.
  • Gordon, Avery. “Some thoughts on haunting and futurity.” borderlands 10.2 (2011): 1-21.
  • Haider, Asad. “Identity: Words and Sequences.” History of the Present 10.2 (2020): 237-255.
  • Harwood, Valerie. “Foucault, narrative and the subjugated subject: Doing research with a grid of sensibility.” The Australian Educational Researcher 28.3 (2001): 141-166.
  • Harwood, Valerie. “Telling truths: Wounded truths and the activity of truth telling.” Discourse 25.4 (2004): 467-476.
  • Heebels, Barbara, and Irina van Aalst. “Surveillance in Practice: Operators’ Collective Interpretation of CCTV Images.” Surveillance & Society 18.3 (2020): 312-327.
  • Henriksson, Andreas. “Norm-critical rationality: emotions and the institutional influence of queer resistance.” Journal of Political Power 10.2 (2017): 149-165.
  • Hoover, Joe. “Performative Rights and Situationist Ethics.” Contemporary Pragmatism 16.2-3 (2019): 242-267.
  • Huber, Jakob. “Looking back, looking forward: Progress, hope, and history.” Constellations (2021).
  • Hunt, Mina. “Tracing Transgender Ghosts.” Sociology and Technoscience 11.1 (2020): 91-103.
  • Javadi, Seyyed Ahmad, et al. “Monitoring Misuse for Accountable’Artificial Intelligence as a Service’.” Proceedings of the AAAI/ACM Conference on AI, Ethics, and Society. 2020.
  • Jenkins, David. “Understanding and fighting structural injustice.” Journal of Social Philosophy (2020).
  • Kaufmann, Mareile, Nanna Bonde Thylstrup, J. Peter Burgess, and Ann Rudinow Sætnan. “engaging the data moment.” DASTS 11.1 (2021).
  • Lilja, Mona, and Stellan Vinthagen. “Dispersed resistance: unpacking the spectrum and properties of glaring and everyday resistance.” Journal of Political Power 11.2 (2018): 211-229.
  • Lindqvist, Mona, and Eva Olsson. “Everyday resistance in psychiatry through harbouring strategies.” Journal of Political Power 10.2 (2017): 200-218.
  • Lugones, Maria. “Playfulness,“world”‐travelling, and loving perception.” Hypatia 2.2 (1987): 3-19.
  • Lynch, Richard A. “Is Power All There Is?: Michel Foucault and the.” Philosophy Today 42.1 (1998): 65-70.
  • Mananzala, Rickke, and Dean Spade. “The nonprofit industrial complex and trans resistance.” Sexuality Research & Social Policy 5.1 (2008): 53.
  • McCabe, Darren. “Strategy-as-power: Ambiguity, contradiction and the exercise of power in a UK building society.” Organization 17.2 (2010): 151-175.
  • McKittrick, Katherine. “On plantations, prisons, and a black sense of place.” Social & Cultural Geography 12.8 (2011): 947-963.
  • McKittrick, Katherine. “Plantation futures.” Small Axe: A Caribbean Journal of Criticism 17.3 (42) (2013): 1-15.
  • McKittrick, Katherine. “Diachronic loops/deadweight tonnage/bad made measure.” cultural geographies 23.1 (2016): 3-18.
  • Medina, José. “Agential Epistemic Injustice and Collective Epistemic Resistance in the Criminal Justice System.” Social Epistemology (2020): 1-12.
  • Muller, M., Wolf, C., Andres, J., Desmond, M., Joshi, N. N., Ashktorab, Z., … & Dugan, C. (2021). Designing Ground Truth and the Social Life of Labels. Proceedings of the 2021 Conference on Computer-Human Interaction. (2021).
  • Nissenbaum, Helen. “Privacy as contextual integrity.” Washington Law Review. 79 (2004): 119.
  • Pérez, Moira. “Queer Politics of History.” lambda nordica 21.3-4 (2016): 15-34.
  • Pillow, Wanda S. “Epistemic witnessing: theoretical responsibilities, decolonial attitude and lenticular futures.” International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 32.2 (2019): 118-135.
  • Pitts, Andrea. “Epistemic injustice and feminist epistemology.” In The Routledge Handbook of Applied Epistemology (2018): 101-114.
  • Schramm, Katharina. “Enacting Differences, Articulating Critique: Recent Approaches to Race in the Social Analysis of Science and Technology.” Science as Culture 24.3 (2015): 340-350.
  • Soto-Lafontaine, M. A. “From Medical to Human-Rights Norms: Examining the Evolution of Trans Norms in the Netherlands.” Politics and Governance 8.3. (2020): 290-300.
  • Sweet, Paige L. “Who Knows? Reflexivity in Feminist Standpoint Theory and Bourdieu.” Gender & Society 34.6 (2020): 922-950.
  • Withers, Deborah M. “Strategic affinities: Historiography and epistemology in contemporary feminist knowledge politics.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 22.2 (2015): 129-142.
  • Zigon, Jarrett. “Can machines be ethical? On the necessity of relational ethics and empathic attunement for data-centric technologies.” Social Research: An International Quarterly 86.4 (2019): 1001-1022.