Stuff I've been reading (July 2024)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in July 2024:

Books and dissertations

  • For once, none! (I have been reading a lot of fiction to distract from the dissertation grind, however)

Papers and Chapters

  • Baldwin, Norma, John Harris, and Des Kelly. “Institutionalisation: why blame the institution?.” Ageing & Society 13.1 (1993): 69-81.
  • Bizzari, Valeria. “Which kind of body in “mental” pathologies? Phenomenological insights on the nature of the disrupted self.” The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy: A Forum for Bioethics and Philosophy of Medicine. Vol. 48. No. 2. US: Oxford University Press, 2023.
  • Forman-Barzilai, Fonna. “Sympathy in Space (s) Adam Smith on Proximity.” Political Theory 33.2 (2005): 189-217.
  • Frankford, David M. “Scientism and economism in the regulation of health care.” Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law 19.4 (1994): 773-799.
  • Georges, Eugenia. “Fetal ultrasound imaging and the production of authoritative knowledge in Greece.” Medical Anthropology Quarterly 10.2 (1996): 157-175.
  • Hamraie, Aimi. “Beyond accommodation: Disability, feminist philosophy, and the design of everyday academic life.” PhiloSOPHIA 6.2 (2016): 259-271.
  • Hofmann, Björn. “On value-judgements and ethics in health technology assessment.” Poiesis & Praxis 3 (2005): 277-295.
  • Lindsay, Sally, and Kristina Fuentes. “It is time to address ableism in academia: a systematic review of the experiences and impact of ableism among faculty and staff.” Disabilities 2.2 (2022): 178-203.
  • Malmqvist, Erik, and Kristin Zeiler. “Cultural norms, the phenomenology of incorporation, and the experience of having a child born with ambiguous sex.” Social Theory and Practice 36.1 (2010): 133-156.
  • Mattingly, Cheryl. “In search of the good: Narrative reasoning in clinical practice.” Medical anthropology quarterly 12.3 (1998): 273-297.
  • O’rourke, Keith. “An historical perspective on meta-analysis: dealing quantitatively with varying study results.” Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 100.12 (2007): 579-582.
  • Wolbring, Gregor, and Aspen Lillywhite. “Burnout through the lenses of equity/equality, diversity and inclusion and disabled people: a scoping review.” Societies 13.5 (2023): 131.
  • Wyschogrod, Edith. “Empathy and sympathy as tactile encounter.” The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 6.1 (1981): 25-44.
  • Zeiler, Kristin, and Anette Wickström. “Why do ‘we’ perform surgery on newborn intersexed children? The phenomenology of the parental experience of having a child with intersex anatomies.” Feminist theory 10.3 (2009): 359-377.
  • Zeiler, Kristin. “A phenomenology of excorporation, bodily alienation, and resistance: Rethinking sexed and racialized embodiment.” Hypatia 28.1 (2013): 69-84.