Things I finished reading in January 2023:
Books and dissertations
- von Busch, Otto, and Karl Palmås. The Corruption of Co-Design: Political and Social Conflicts in Participatory Design Thinking. Taylor & Francis, 2023.
- Callahan, Daniel. What price better health?: Hazards of the research imperative. Vol. 9. University of California Press, 2003.
- Childress, Andrew. Visualizing the Other: A Phenomenological Analysis of the Objectification of the Body in Biomedical Research Using Human Subjects. Diss. 2012.
- Cornell, Drucilla. At the Heart of Freedom: Feminism, Sex, and Equality. Princeton University Press, 1998.
- Dean, Jodi. Solidarity of strangers: Feminism after identity politics. University of California Press, 1996.
- Forrester, Katrina. In the Shadow of Justice: Postwar Liberalism and the Remaking of Political Philosophy. Princeton University Press, 2019.
- Hancock, Ange-Marie. The politics of disgust: The public identity of the welfare queen. NYU Press, 2004.
- Harcourt, Bernard E. Critique and Praxis. Columbia University Press, 2020.
- Hasan, Zoya, Aziz Z. Huq, and Martha C. Nussbaum, eds. The empire of disgust: Prejudice, discrimination, and policy in India and the US. Oxford University Press, 2018.
- Howell, Joel D. Technology in the Hospital: Transforming Patient Care in the Early Twentieth Century. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1995.
- Jerónimo, Helena M., José Luís Garcia, and Carl Mitcham, eds. Jacques Ellul and the technological society in the 21st century. Dordrecht: Springer, 2013.
- Kahan, Benjamin. The Book of Minor Perverts: Sexology, Etiology, and the Emergences of Sexuality. University of Chicago Press, 2019.
- Kim, Eunjung. Curative violence: Rehabilitating disability, gender, and sexuality in modern Korea. Duke University Press, 2017.
- Levy, Jay A., Claude Jasmin, and Gabriel Bez, eds. Cancer, AIDS, and quality of life. Plenum Press, 1997.
- Marshall, Daniel, and Zeb Tortorici, eds. Turning Archival: The Life of the Historical in Queer Studies. Duke University Press, 2022.
- Mathews, J. Rosser. Quantification and the quest for medical certainty. Princeton University Press, 1995.
- Nussbaum, Martha C. From disgust to humanity: Sexual orientation and constitutional law. Oxford University Press, 2010.
- Powell, Philip A., and Nathan S. Consedine, eds. The Handbook of Disgust Research: Modern Perspectives and Applications. Springer, 2021.
- Reynolds, Joel Michael. The Life Worth Living: Disability, Pain, and Morality. University of Minnesota Press, 2022.
- Rosa, Hartmut. Resonance: A sociology of our relationship to the world. John Wiley & Sons, 2019.
- Stone, Amy L. Gay rights at the ballot box. University of Minnesota Press, 2012.
- Stuhr, John J., ed. Philosophy and Human Flourishing. Oxford University Press, 2022.
- Wilson, Elizabeth A. Neural geographies: Feminism and the microstructure of cognition. Routledge, 2016.
Papers and Chapters
- Akrivos, Dimitris. “Transgender reporting in the British press: editorial standards and discursive harms in the post-Leveson era.” Journal of Media Law (2022): 1-36.
- Andre, Judith. “Learning to see: moral growth during medical training.” Journal of medical ethics 18.3 (1992): 148-152.
- Baume, Sandrine, and Yannis Papadopoulos. “Against compromise in democracy? A plea for a fine‐grained assessment.” Constellations (2022).
- Burggraeve, Roger. “Violence and the vulnerable face of the other: The vision of Emmanuel Levinas on moral evil and our responsibility.” Journal of Social Philosophy 30.1 (1999): 29-45.
- Carter, Rodney GS. “Of things said and unsaid: power, archival silences, and power in silence.” Archivaria (2006): 215-233.
- ChoGlueck, Christopher. “Imposing values and enforcing gender through knowledge: Epistemic oppression with the morning-after pill’s drug label.” Hypatia 37.2 (2022): 315-342.
- Cieslik, Mark. “Not smiling but frowning’: Sociology and the ‘problem of happiness.” Sociology 49.3 (2015): 422-437.
- Dame-Griff, Avery. “Herding the ‘performing elephants:’ Using computational methods to study Usenet.” Internet Histories 3.3-4 (2019): 223-244.
- Epstein, Steven. “The new attack on sexuality research: Morality and the politics of knowledge production.” Sexuality Research and Social Policy Journal of NSRC 3.1 (2006): 1-12.
- Fahs, Breanne. “Mapping ‘gross’ bodies: The regulatory politics of disgust.” Aesthetic Labour. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2017. 83-99.
- Gadarian, Shana Kushner, and Eric Van der Vort. “The gag reflex: Disgust rhetoric and gay rights in American politics.” Political Behavior 40.2 (2018): 521-543.
- Glasbeek, Amanda. “The Haunting of Surveillance Studies: Seeing, Knowing, and Ghostly Apparitions.” Surveillance & Society 20.4 (2022): 364-371.
- Harbin, Ami. “Bodily disorientation and moral change.” Hypatia 27.2 (2012): 261-280.
- Harris, Verne. “Genres of the trace: memory, archives and trouble.” Archives and Manuscripts 40.3 (2012): 147-157.
- Holmes, Mary. “Feeling beyond rules: Politicizing the sociology of emotion and anger in feminist politics.” European Journal of Social Theory 7.2 (2004): 209-227.
- Instone, Susan L., Mary-Rose Mueller, and Tari L. Gilbert. “Therapeutic discourse among nurses and physicians in controlled clinical trials.” Nursing Ethics 15.6 (2008): 803-812.
- Kagan, Shelly. “The limits of well-being.” Social Philosophy and Policy 9.2 (1992): 169-189.
- Kumar, Anuradha. “Disgust, stigma, and the politics of abortion.” Feminism & Psychology 28.4 (2018): 530-538.
- Lupton, Deborah. “The pedagogy of disgust: the ethical, moral and political implications of using disgust in public health campaigns.” Critical public health 25.1 (2015): 4-14.
- Matsuda, Jessica. “Leave Them Kids Alone: State Constitutional Protections for Gender-Affirming Healthcare.” Washington and Lee Law Review 79.4 (2022): 1597.
- Mueller, Mary‐Rose. “Talk, research technology, and the achievement of human subject “status passage”.” Symbolic Interaction 28.3 (2005): 349-366.
- Mueller, Mary-Rose. “The work and occupational trajectories of clinical trials research.” Journal of Applied Sociology 1 (2006): 44-52.
- Peña, Susana. “Gender and sexuality in Latina/o Miami: Documenting Latina transsexual activists.” Gender & History 22.3 (2010): 755-772.
- Plemons, Eric. “Trans Women as Pregnant Women: A Story of Two Technologies.” Women’s Reproductive Health (2022): 1-18.
- Rawson, Kelly Jacob. “Accessing transgender//desiring queer (er?) archival logics.” Archivaria (2009): 123-140.
- Redburn, Kate. “Before Equal Protection: The Fall of Anti-Crossdressing Laws and the Origins of the Transgender Legal Movement 1964-1980.” Law and History Review (2022).
- Reilly, Julia. “Bostock’s Effect on the Future of the ADA’s Gender Identity Disorder Exclusion: Transgender Civil Rights and Beyond.” San Diego Law Review 59.1 (2022): 181.
- Stone, Amy L. “More than adding a T: American lesbian and gay activists’ attitudes towards transgender inclusion.” Sexualities 12.3 (2009): 334-354.
- Steinbock, Eliza. “Affective Justice: Raising the Dead in Trans* Archival Media.” In The Routledge Companion to Gender and Affect. Routledge 247-257.
- De Vries, Kylan Mattias. “Intersectional identities and conceptions of the self: The experience of transgender people.” Symbolic Interaction 35.1 (2012): 49-67.
- Zottola, Angela, and Rodrigo Borba. “Gender ideology’and the discursive infrastructure of a transnational conspiracy theory.” Discourses of and about Conspiracy Theories (2022): 465-488.