Things I finished reading in July 2022:
Books and dissertations
- Burns, C. Pressing Matters: A Trans Activism Memoir. Vol 1, 2014.
- Burns, C. Pressing Matters: A Trans Activism Memoir. Vol 2, 2014.
- Chun, Wendy Hui Kyong. Discriminating data: Correlation, neighborhoods, and the new politics of recognition. MIT Press, 2021.
- Clark, Joanna. Before my Warranty Runs Out: Human, Transgender and Environmental Rights Advocate. Castle Carrington, 2021.
- Craddock, Paul. Spare Parts: The Story of Medicine Through the History of Transplant Surgery. St Martin’s Press, 2022.
- Delimata, Natalie. Articulating intersex: a crisis at the intersection of scientific facts and social ideals. Cham: Springer, 2019.
- Diprose, Rosalyn. The bodies of women: Ethics, embodiment and sexual differences. Routledge, 2005.
- Flannery, Joanne May. Deviant bodies: understanding trans becoming from the perspectives of medico-psychiatry and trans-subjectivity. University of Leicester (United Kingdom), 2004.
- Fox, Renée C., Judith P. Swozey, and Judith C. Watkins. Spare parts: Organ replacement in American society. Routledge, 2017.
- Goodman, Kenneth W. Ethics and Evidence-Based Medicine: Fallibility and Responsibility in Clinical Science. Cambridge University Press, 2002.
- Halperin, David M., and Trevor Hoppe, eds. The war on sex. Duke University Press, 2017.
- Hansen, Will. “Every Bloody Right To Be Here”: Trans Resistance in Aotearoa New Zealand, 1967-1989. Diss. Open Access Te Herenga Waka-Victoria University of Wellington, 2020.
- Hansson, Kristofer, and Rachel Irwin. Movement of knowledge: Medical humanities perspectives on medicine, science, and experience. Kriterium, 2020.
- Hunter, Kathryn Montgomery. Doctors’ stories: The narrative structure of medical knowledge. Princeton University Press, 1991.
- Jamel, Joanna. Transphobic hate crime. Springer, 2017.
- Janssen, Ephraim Das. Phenomenal gender: What transgender experience discloses. Indiana University Press, 2017.
- Koch, Ellen Breckenridge. The process of innovation in medical technology: American research on ultrasound, 1947 to 1962. University of Pennsylvania, 1990.
- Leder, Drew. The absent body. University of Chicago Press, 1990.
- Löwy, Ilana. Between bench and bedside: science, healing, and interleukin-2 in a cancer ward. Harvard University Press, 1996.
- Marrow, Elliot. ” Until Society Evolves:” Access to Gender-Affirming Care in Historic Assessment Criteria and Current Models of Care. Diss. University of Massachusetts Boston, 2022.
- McKinney, Cait. Information activism: a queer history of lesbian media technologies. Duke University Press, 2020.
- Pearl, Sharrona. Face/On: face transplants and the ethics of the other. University of Chicago Press, 2017.
- Raj, Rupert. Dancing the Dialectic: True Tales of a Transgender Trailblazer. 2nd ed, TransGender Publishing, 2020.
- Resier, Stanley J. The machine at the bedside: Strategies for using technology in patient care. Cambridge University Press, 1984.
- Rosenberg, Charles E., and Janet Lynne Golden, eds. Framing disease: studies in cultural history. Rutgers University Press, 1992.
- Schlich, Thomas. Surgery, science and industry. Palgrave Macmillan, 2002.
- Schuller, Kyla. The biopolitics of feeling: Race, sex, and science in the nineteenth century. Duke University Press, 2018.
- Solomon, Miriam. Social empiricism. MIT press, 2007.
- Spiro, Howard Marget, et al., eds. Empathy and the practice of medicine: beyond pills and the scalpel. Yale University Press, 1993.
- Talley, Heather Laine. Saving Face: Disfigurement & The Politics of Appearance. New York University Press, 2014.
- Tebbutt, Clare R. Popular and Medical Understandings of Sex Change in 1930s Britain. Diss. The University of Manchester (United Kingdom), 2015.
- Wears, Robert, and Kathleen Sutcliffe. Still not safe: patient safety and the middle-managing of American medicine. Oxford University Press, 2019.
- Weisz, G., ed. Social Science Perspectives on Medical Ethics. Springer Science & Business Media, 1989.
Papers and Chapters
- Ahmed, Aziza. “Medical evidence and expertise in abortion jurisprudence.” American Journal of Law & Medicine 41.1 (2015): 85-118.
- Alichniewicz, Anna. “Monstrous body: between alienness and ownness.” Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 11.2 (2021): 403-414.
- Barkun, Jeffrey S., et al. “Evaluation and stages of surgical innovations.” The Lancet 374.9695 (2009): 1089-1096.
- Barnes, Emm. “Between remission and cure: patients, practitioners and the transformation of leukaemia in the late twentieth century.” Chronic Illness 3.4 (2007): 253-264.
- Barton, Erica, Subasri Narasimhan, and Dabney P. Evans. ““It didn’t matter what the bill said…”: Influences on abortion policy legislative decision-making in Georgia.” Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association 8.3 (2021): 2.
- Bettcher, Talia Mae. “Trapped in the wrong theory: Rethinking trans oppression and resistance.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 39.2 (2014): 383-406.
- Boler, Megan. “The risks of empathy: Interrogating multiculturalism’s gaze.” Cultural studies 11.2 (1997): 253-273.
- Bolin, Anne. “Transsexuals and caretakers power and deceit in intergroup relations.” City & Society 1.1 (1987): 64-79.
- Bothwell, Laura E., and David S. Jones. “Innovation and tribulation in the history of randomized controlled trials in surgery.” Annals of Surgery 274.6 (2021): e616-e624.
- Capron, Alexander Morgan. “Does assessment of medical practices have a future?.” Virginia Law Review (1996): 1623-1640.
- Dahlberg, Helena. “Beyond the absent body—A phenomenological contribution to the understanding of body awareness in health and illness.” Nursing Philosophy 20.2 (2019): e12235.
- Duschinsky, Robbie. “Abjection and self-identity: Towards a revised account of purity and impurity.” The Sociological Review 61.4 (2013): 709-727.
- Fox, Daniel M. “Health policy and the politics of research in the United States.” Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 15.3 (1990): 481-499.
- Gimlin, Debra. “The absent body project: Cosmetic surgery as a response to bodily dys-appearance.” Sociology 40.4 (2006): 699-716.
- Gross, Sky E., and Judith T. Shuval. “On knowing and believing: prenatal genetic screening and resistance to ‘risk-medicine’.” Health, risk & society 10.6 (2008): 549-564.
- Harrison, Stephen, and Bruce Wood. “Scientific-Bureaucratic medicine and UK health policy” Review of policy research 17.4 (2000): 25-42.
- Harrison, Stephen, Michael Moran, and Bruce Wood. “Policy emergence and policy convergence: the case of ‘scientific-bureaucratic medicine’ in the United States and United Kingdom.” The British Journal of Politics and International Relations 4.1 (2002): 1-24.
- Hayward, Tim. ““Conspiracy theory”: The case for being critically receptive.” Journal of Social Philosophy July 2020 (2021): 1-20.
- Hollan, Douglas, and C. Jason Throop. “Whatever happened to empathy?: Introduction.” Ethos 36.4 (2008): 385-401.
- Hollan, Douglas. “Being there: On the imaginative aspects of understanding others and being understood.” Ethos 36.4 (2008): 475-489.
- Hudak, Pamela L., Patricia McKeever, and James G. Wright. “Unstable embodiments: a phenomenological interpretation of patient satisfaction with treatment outcome.” Journal of Medical Humanities 28.1 (2007): 31-44.
- Jacob, Jean Daniel, Marilou Gagnon, and Dave Holmes. “Nursing so‐called monsters: On the importance of abjection and fear in forensic psychiatric nursing.” Journal of Forensic nursing 5.3 (2009): 153-161.
- Jeffrey, Kirk. “Pacing the heart: growth and redefinition of a medical technology, 1952-1975.” Technology and culture 36.3 (1995): 583-624.
- Jones, David S. “Visions of a cure: visualization, clinical trials, and controversies in cardiac therapeutics, 1968-1998.” Isis 91.3 (2000): 504-541.
- Jones, David S., and Kavita Sivaramakrishnan. “Making heart-lung machines work in India: Imports, indigenous innovation and the challenge of replicating cardiac surgery in Bombay, 1952-1962.” Social Studies of Science 48.4 (2018): 507-539.
- Koopman, Colin. “Infopolitics, Biopolitics, Anatomopolitics: Toward a Genealogy of the Power of Data.” Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 39.1 (2018): 103-128.
- Lišková, Kateřina, and Andrea Bělehradová. “‘We Won’t Ban Castrating Pervs Despite What Europe Might Think!’: Czech Medical Sexology and the Practice of Therapeutic Castration.” Medical History 63.3 (2019): 330-351.
- Lockhart, Jeffrey W. “‘A Large and Longstanding Body’: Historical Authority in the Science of Sex.” In Far-Right Revisionism and the End of History. Routledge, 2020. 359-386.
- Magubane, Zine. “Spectacles and scholarship: Caster Semenya, intersex studies, and the problem of race in feminist theory.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 39.3 (2014): 761-785.
- McGuire, Anne. “De-regulating disorder.” Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies 11.4 (2017): 403-422.
- Moore, Francis D. “The desperate case: CARE (costs, applicability, research, ethics).” JAMA 261.10 (1989): 1483-1484.
- Moyer, Laura P. ““She Blinded Me with Science”: The Use of Science Frames in Abortion Litigation before the Supreme Court.” Justice System Journal (2021): 1-27.
- Nagy, Jeff. “Autism and the making of emotion AI: Disability as resource for surveillance capitalism.” New Media & Society (2022): 14614448221109550.
- Noah, Lars. “Medicine’s epistemology: Mapping the haphazard diffusion of knowledge in the biomedical community.” Arizona Law Review 44 (2002): 373.
- Pearl, Sharrona. “Victorian Blockbuster Bodies and the Freakish Pleasure of Looking.” Nineteenth-Century Contexts 38.2 (2016): 93-106.
- Romell, Emma, et al. “Expert participation in 25 years of Wisconsin abortion policymaking.” Contraception 109 (2022): 43-48.
- Scott, W. Richard. “Innovation in medical care organizations: A synthetic review.” Medical Care Review 47.2 (1990): 165-192.
- Scull, Andrew. “The mental health sector and the social sciences in post-World War II USA Part 2: The impact of federal research funding and the drugs revolution.” History of Psychiatry 22.3 (2011): 268-284.
- Slatman, Jenny. “Multiple dimensions of embodiment in medical practices.” Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 17.4 (2014): 549-557.
- Swazey, Judith P. “Protecting the “animal of necessity”: Limits to inquiry in clinical investigation.” Daedalus (1978): 129-145.
- Taipale, Jaakko, and Lotta Hautamäki. “Clinical practice guidelines in courts’ representation of medical evidence and testimony.” Social Science & Medicine 275 (2021): 113805.
- Velocci, Beans. “Wrenching Torque: On Being Professionally Nonbinary.” Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 52.3 (2022): 476-484.
- Walter, Tony. “Body Worlds: clinical detachment and anatomical awe.” Sociology of health & illness 26.4 (2004): 464-488.
- Warner, Kenneth E. “A “desperation-reaction” model of medical diffusion.” Health Services Research 10.4 (1975): 369.
- Woodruff, Katie, and Sarah CM Roberts. ““My good friends on the other side of the aisle aren’t bothered by those facts”: US State legislators’ use of evidence in making policy on abortion.” Contraception 101.4 (2020): 249-255.
- Wu, Albert W. “Medical error: the second victim: the doctor who makes the mistake needs help too.” BMJ 320.7237 (2000): 726-727.
- Zeiler, Kristin. “A phenomenological analysis of bodily self-awareness in the experience of pain and pleasure: On dys-appearance and eu-appearance.” Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 13.4 (2010): 333-342.
- Ziegler, Mary. “The Jurisprudence of Uncertainty: Knowledge, Science, and Abortion.” Wisconsin Law Review. (2018): 317.