Stuff I've been reading (December 2021)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in January 2022:

Books and dissertations

  • Appeltova, Michaela. Did the Body Have a Cold War? Gendered Bodies and Embodied Experiences in Late Socialist Czechoslovakia. Diss. The University of Chicago, 2019.
  • Bryant, Karl Edward. The politics of pathology and the making of gender identity disorder. Diss. University of California, Santa Barbara, 2007.
  • Bullough, Vern L., Vern L. Bullough, and Bonnie Bullough. Cross dressing, sex, and gender. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1993.
  • Dewey, John. The political writings. Hackett Publishing, 1993.
  • Februari, Maxim. The Making of a Man: Notes on Transsexuality. Reaktion Books, 2015.
  • Fry, Jane. Being different: the autobiography of Jane Fry. Wiley-Interscience, 1974.
  • Gleeson, Jules Joanne, and Elle O’Rourke, eds. Transgender Marxism. (2021).
  • Hall, Cheryl. The trouble with passion: Political theory beyond the reign of reason. Routledge, 2013.
  • Hiland, Emma Bedor. Therapy Tech: The Digital Transformation of Mental Healthcare. University of Minnesota Press, 2021.
  • Hines, Sally. TransForming gender: Transgender practices of identity, intimacy and care. Policy Press, 2007.
  • Jasanoff, Sheila. Designs on nature. Princeton University Press, 2011.
  • Kuchinskaya, Olga. The politics of invisibility: Public knowledge about radiation health effects after Chernobyl. MIT Press, 2014.
  • Laub, Donald R. Second Lives, Second Chances. ECW Press, 2019.
  • Marks, Harry M. The progress of experiment: science and therapeutic reform in the United States, 1900-1990. Cambridge University Press, 2000.
  • McWhorter, Ladelle. Bodies and pleasures: Foucault and the politics of sexual normalization. Indiana University Press, 1999.
  • Morris, Jan. Conundrum. New York Review of Books, 2006.
  • Murphy, Michelle. Sick building syndrome and the problem of uncertainty. Duke University Press, 2006.
  • Polansky, Samara. Delisting Sex-reassignment Surgery in Ontario: A Justified Limit Or a Limited Justification?. Diss. University of Toronto, 2007.
  • Prentice, Rachel. Bodies in formation. Duke University Press, 2012.
  • Rajan, Kaushik Sunder. Biocapital. Duke University Press, 2006.
  • Rheinberger, Hans-Jorg. Toward a History of Epistemic Things. Stanford University Press, 1997.
  • Rothman, David J. Strangers at the bedside: A history of how law and bioethics transformed medical decision making. Routledge, 2017.
  • Ryan, J. Michael. Trans Lives in a Globalizing World: Rights, Identities, and Politics. Routledge, 2020.
  • Shklar, Judith N. American citizenship: The quest for inclusion. Harvard University Press, 1991.
  • Slothouber, Vanessa. Narratives of De/Retransition: Disrupting the Boundaries of Gender and Time. Diss. University of Western Ontario, 2021.
  • Thorneycroft, Ryan. Reimagining disablist and ableist violence as abjection. Routledge, 2020.
  • Wolf, Jacqueline H. Cesarean section: An American history of risk, technology, and consequence. JHU Press, 2018.

Papers and Chapters

  • Aggrey, John K., and Wesley Shrum. “Politics and trust in Ebola vaccine trials: The case of Ghana.” Politics and the Life Sciences 39.1 (2020): 38-55.
  • Alm, Erika. “What constitutes an in/significant organ?: The vicissitudes of juridical and medical decision-making regarding genital surgery for intersex and trans people in Sweden.” Body, Migration, Re/Constructive Surgeries. Routledge, 2018. 225-240.
  • Aradau, Claudia, and Jef Huysmans. “Assembling credibility: Knowledge, method and critique in times of ‘post-truth’.” Security Dialogue 50.1 (2019): 40-58.
  • Bannon, Liam, Kjeld Schmidt, and Ina Wagner. “Lest we forget.” *ECSCW 2011: Proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work**, 24-28 September 2011, Aarhus Denmark. Springer, London, 2011.
  • Bester, Johan Christiaan. “Vaccine refusal and trust: the trouble with coercion and education and suggestions for a cure.” Journal of Bioethical Inquiry 12.4 (2015): 555-559.
  • de Boer, Bas, and Olya Kudina. “What is morally at stake when using algorithms to make medical diagnoses? Expanding the discussion beyond risks and harms.” Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics (2022): 1-22.
  • Clarke, Adele, and Theresa Montini. “The many faces of RU486: Tales of situated knowledges and technological contestations.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 18.1 (1993): 42-78.
  • Davies, William, and Linsey McGoey. “Rationalities of ignorance: On financial crisis and the ambivalence of neo-liberal epistemology.” Economy and Society 41.1 (2012): 64-83.
  • Dreyfus, Hubert L., and Stuart E. Dreyfus. “From Socrates to expert systems: The limits of calculative rationality.” Technology in Society 6.3 (1984): 217-233.
  • Ducey, Ariel, and Shoghi Nikoo. “Formats of responsibility: elective surgery in the era of evidence‐based medicine.” Sociology of health & illness 40.3 (2018): 494-507.
  • Elgabsi, Natan. “The ‘ethic of knowledge’and responsible science: Responses to genetically motivated racism.” Social Studies of Science (2021): 03063127211063887.
  • Evans, Robert. “SAGE advice and political decision-making:‘Following the science’in times of epistemic uncertainty.” Social Studies of Science (2021): 03063127211062586.
  • Feiner, Natasha. “Endocrinology, “Transsexual Agency”, and the Boundaries of Medical Authority”. Ex Historia (2015): 15.
  • Foerster, Maxime. “On the History of Transsexuals in France.” In Transgender Experience. Routledge, 2013. 31-42.
  • Gehi, Pooja S., and Gabriel Arkles. “Unraveling injustice: Race and class impact of Medicaid exclusions of transition-related health care for transgender people.” Sexuality Research & Social Policy 4.4 (2007): 7-35.
  • Hanemaayer, Ariane. “Don’t touch my stuff: historicising resistance to AI and algorithmic computer technologies in medicine.” Interdisciplinary Science Reviews 46.1-2 (2021): 126-137.
  • Hellman, Samuel, and Deborah S. Hellman. “Of mice but not men: problems of the randomized clinical trial.” New England Journal of Medicine 324.22 (1991): 1585-1589.
  • Hirschauer, Stefan. “The manufacture of bodies in surgery.” Social studies of science 21.2 (1991): 279-319.
  • Houdt, Friso van, and Willem Schinkel. “Crime, citizenship and community: Neoliberal communitarian images of governmentality.” The sociological review 62.1 (2014): 47-67.
  • Jones, Caroline OH, and Holly A. Williams. “The social burden of malaria: what are we measuring?.” The American journal of tropical medicine and hygiene 71.2 Supp (2004): 156-161.
  • King, Dave. “Social constructionism and medical knowledge: the case of transsexualism.” Sociology of Health & Illness 9.4 (1987): 351-377.
  • Lebovitz, Sarah, Hila Lifshitz-Assaf, and Natalia Levina. “To Engage or Not to Engage with AI for Critical Judgments: How Professionals Deal with Opacity When Using AI for Medical Diagnosis.” Organization Science (2022).
  • Leese, Matthias, Kristoffer Lidén, and Blagovesta Nikolova. “Putting critique to work: Ethics in EU security research.” Security Dialogue 50.1 (2019): 59-76.
  • Lehoux, Pascale, and Stuart Blume. “Technology assessment and the sociopolitics of health technologies.” Journal of health politics, policy and law 25.6 (2000): 1083-1120.
  • Lewandowsky, Stephan, Ullrich KH Ecker, and John Cook. “Beyond misinformation: Understanding and coping with the “post-truth” era.” Journal of applied research in memory and cognition 6.4 (2017): 353-369.
  • Linander, Ida, et al. “Negotiating the (bio) medical gaze–Experiences of trans-specific healthcare in Sweden.” Social Science & Medicine 174 (2017): 9-16.
  • Linander, Ida, et al. ““It was like I had to fit into a category”: Care-seekers’ experiences of gender regulation in the Swedish trans-specific healthcare.” Health 23.1 (2019): 21-38.
  • Linander, Ida, et al. “Two steps forward, one step back: A policy analysis of the Swedish guidelines for trans-specific healthcare.” Sexuality Research and Social Policy 18 (2021): 309-320.
  • McGoey, Linsey. “Sequestered evidence and the distortion of clinical practice guidelines.” Perspectives in biology and medicine 52.2 (2009): 203-217.
  • McGoey, Linsey. “The logic of strategic ignorance.” The British journal of sociology 63.3 (2012): 533-576.
  • McKinlay, John B. “From” promising report” to” standard procedure”: seven stages in the career of a medical innovation.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society 59.3 (1981): 374-411.
  • Moreira, Tiago. “Health care standards and the politics of singularities: Shifting in and out of context.” Science, technology, & human values 37.4 (2012): 307-331.
  • Neri, Jessica, Antonio Iudici, and Elena Faccio. “Mental health practitioners’ narratives about gender transition and the role of diagnosis: A qualitative study in the Italian context.” Health & Social Care in the Community.
  • Nord, Iwo. “Routes to gender-affirming surgery: Navigation and negotiation in times of biomedicalization.” Body, migration, re/constructive surgeries. Routledge, 2018. 209-224.
  • Oldenhof, Lieke, Rik Wehrens, and Roland Bal. “Dealing With Conflicting Values in Policy Experiments: A New Pragmatist Approach.” Administration & Society (2022): 00953997211069326.
  • Plemons, Eric. “Anatomical Authorities: On the Epistemological Exclusion of Trans-Surgical Patients.” Medical anthropology 34.5 (2015): 425-441.
  • Pons Rabasa, Alba. “From representation to corposubjectivation: The configuration of transgender in Mexico City.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 3.3-4 (2016): 388-411.
  • Rosqvist, Hanna Bertilsdotter, Lisa Nordlund, and Niclas Kaiser. Developing an authentic sex: Deconstructing developmental–psychological discourses of transgenderism in a clinical setting. Feminism & Psychology 24.1 (2014): 20-36.
  • Thomassen, Lasse. “The “populist” foundation of liberal democracy: Jan-Werner Müller, Chantal Mouffe, and post-foundationalism.” Philosophy & Social Criticism (2022): 01914537211066860.
  • Valkenburg, Govert. “Consensus or contestation: Reflections on governance of innovation in a context of heterogeneous knowledges.” Science, Technology and Society 25.2 (2020): 341-356.
  • Vásquez-Saavedra, Cristián, Gabriel Abarca-Brown, and Svenska Arensburg Castelli. “Towards a “transitioning”: Biographical clues on gender transition, malaise, and health services in Chile.” Ciencia & saude coletiva 27 (2022): 243-252.
  • Vredenburgh, Kate. “Freedom at Work: Understanding, Alienation, and the AI-Driven Workplace.” (2022).
  • Wallman, Sandra. “Ordinary women and shapes of knowledge: perspectives on the context of STD and AIDS.” Public Understanding of Science 7.2 (1998): 169-185.
  • Whooley, Owen, and Kristin Kay Barker. “Uncertain and under Quarantine: Toward a Sociology of Medical Ignorance.” Journal of Health and Social Behavior 62.3 (2021): 271-285.
  • Wynne, Brian. “Knowledges in context.” Science, Technology, & Human Valuess 16.1 (1991): 111-121.
  • Wynne, Brian. “Creating public alienation: expert cultures of risk and ethics on GMOs.” Science as culture 10.4 (2001): 445-481.
  • Wynne, Brian. “Public engagement as a means of restoring public trust in science–hitting the notes, but missing the music?.” Public Health Genomics 9.3 (2006): 211-220.