Stuff I've been reading (June 2020)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in June 2020:

Books

  • Browne, Victoria. Feminism, time, and nonlinear history. Springer, 2014.
  • Currah, Paisley, Richard M. Juang, and Shannon Minter, eds. Transgender rights. University of Minnesota Press, 2006.
  • Dean, Mitchell. The signature of power: Sovereignty, governmentality and biopolitics. Sage, 2013.
  • Dolmage, Jay Timothy. Disability rhetoric. Syracuse University Press, 2014.
  • Ebeling, Mary FE. Healthcare and big data. Philadelphia: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.
  • Giddens, Anthony. The transformation of intimacy: Sexuality, love and eroticism in modern societies. John Wiley & Sons, 2013.
  • Glick, Megan H. Infrahumanisms: Science, culture, and the Making of Modern Non/personhood. Duke University Press, 2018.
  • Halpern, Orit. Beautiful data: A history of vision and reason since 1945. Duke University Press, 2015.
  • Hemmings, Clare. Why stories matter: The political grammar of feminist theory. Duke University Press, 2011.
  • Irvine, Janice M. Disorders of desire: sexuality and gender in modern American sexology. Temple University Press, 2005.
  • Jack, Jordynn. Autism and gender: From refrigerator mothers to computer geeks. University of Illinois Press, 2014.
  • Jefferson, Brian. Digitize and Punish: Racial Criminalization in the Digital Age. University of Minnesota Press, 2020.
  • Johnson, Ann. Hitting the brakes: Engineering design and the production of knowledge. Duke University Press, 2009.
  • Koopman, Colin. Genealogy as critique: Foucault and the problems of modernity. Indiana University Press, 2013.
  • Laclau, Ernesto, and Chantal Mouffe. Hegemony and socialist strategy: Towards a radical democratic politics. Verso Trade, 2014.
  • Lemke, Thomas. Foucault’s Analysis of Modern Governmentality: A Critique of Political Reason. Verso Books, 2019.
  • Longino, Helen E. Science as social knowledge: Values and objectivity in scientific inquiry. Princeton University Press, 1990.
  • Mbembe, Achille. Critique of black reason. Duke University Press, 2017.
  • Mbembe, Achille. Necropolitics. Duke University Press, 2019.
  • Meckfessel, Shon. Nonviolence Ain’t what it Used to be: Unarmed Insurrection and the Rhetoric of Resistance. Ak Press, 2016.
  • Mohanty, Chandra Talpade. Feminism without borders: Decolonizing theory, practicing solidarity. Duke University Press, 2003.
  • Nelson, Alondra, Thuy Linh Nguyen Tu, and Alicia Headlam Hines, eds. Technicolor: Race, technology, and everyday life. NYU Press, 2001.
  • Norris, Clive, and Gary Armstrong. The maximum surveillance society: The rise of CCTV. Oxford: Berg, 1999.
  • Phipps, Alison. Me, not you: The trouble with mainstream feminism. Manchester University Press, 2020.
  • Rabinow, Paul. Marking time: On the anthropology of the contemporary. Princeton University Press, 2009.
  • Riles, Annelise. Documents: artifacts of modern knowledge. University of Michigan Press, 2006.
  • Shrage, Laurie J., ed. You’ve changed: Sex reassignment and personal identity. Oxford University Press, 2009.
  • Wade, Peter. Degrees of mixture, degrees of freedom: Genomics, multiculturalism, and race in Latin America. Duke University Press, 2017.
  • Ward, Jane. Respectably queer: Diversity culture in LGBT activist organizations. Vanderbilt University Press, 2008.
  • Williams, Kristian. Our enemies in blue: Police and power in America. AK Press, 2015.
  • Zerubavel, Eviatar. Ancestors and relatives: Genealogy, identity, and community. Oxford University Press, 2012.

Papers and Chapters

  • Abel, Charles F. “Beyond the Mainstream: Foucault, Power and Organization Theory.” International Journal of Organization Theory & Behavior (PrAcademics Press) 8.4 (2005).
  • Alm, Erika, and Elisabeth Engebretsen. “Gender Self-identification.” lambda nordica 25.1 (2020): 48-56.
  • Arfini, Elia AG. “Transfeminism.” lambda nordica 25.1 (2020): 160-165.
  • Avgerou, Chrisanthi. “Contextual explanation: alternative approaches and persistent challenges.” MIS Quarterly 43.3 (2019): 977-1006.
  • Bagatell, Nancy. “Orchestrating voices: autism, identity and the power of discourse.” Disability & Society 22.4 (2007): 413-426.
  • Beck, Eevi. “What Doesn’t Fit: The ‘Residual Category’ as Analytic Resource.” In Social Thinking-Software Practice. 2002.
  • Beck, Eevi. “P for political: Participation is not enough.” Scandinavian Journal of Information Systems 14.1 (2002): 1.
  • Benton, Ted. “Objective’interests and the sociology of power.” Sociology 15.2 (1981): 161-184.
  • Beutin, Lyndsey P. “Racialization as a way of seeing: the limits of counter-surveillance and Police reform.” Surveillance & Society 15.1 (2017): 5-20.
  • Borba, Rodrigo. “The interactional making of a “true transsexual”: Language and (dis) identification in trans-specific healthcare.” International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2019.256 (2019): 21-55.
  • Cammaerts, Bart, and Robin Mansell. “Digital Platform Policy and Regulation: Toward a Radical Democratic Turn.” International Journal of Communication 14 (2020): 20.
  • Coles, Jan, et al. “A qualitative exploration of researcher trauma and researchers’ responses to investigating sexual violence.” Violence against women 20.1 (2014): 95-117.
  • Colliver, Ben, Adrian Coyle, and Marisa Silvestri. “The ‘online othering’of transgender people in relation to ‘gender neutral toilets’.” Online Othering. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2019. 215-237.
  • Dantec, Christopher A. Le, and Carl DiSalvo. “Infrastructuring and the formation of publics in participatory design.” Social Studies of Science 43.2 (2013): 241-264.
  • DeGloma, Thomas. “The strategies of mnemonic battle: On the alignment of autobiographical and collective memories in conflicts over the past.” American Journal of Cultural Sociology 3.1 (2015): 156-190.
  • Van Dijk, Teun A. “Principles of critical discourse analysis.” Discourse & society 4.2 (1993): 249-283.
  • Dillon, Elizabeth Maddock. “Zombie Biopolitics.” American Quarterly 71.3 (2019): 625-652.
  • Draz, Marie. “Born This Way? Time and the Coloniality of Gender.” The Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31.3 (2017): 372-384.
  • Draz, Marie. “From Duration to Self-Identification? The Temporal Politics of the California Gender Recognition Act.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 6.4 (2019): 593-607.
  • Easterbrook, Steve M., et al. “A survey of empirical studies of conflict.” CSCW: Cooperation or conflict?. Springer, London, 1993. 1-68.
  • Ellingson, Laura L., and Patty Sotirin. “Data engagement: A critical materialist framework for making data in qualitative research.” Qualitative Inquiry (2019): 1077800419846639.
  • Elman, Julie Passanante. ““Find Your Fit”: Wearable technology and the cultural politics of disability.” New Media & Society 20.10 (2018): 3760-3777.
  • Espeland, Wendy, and Vincent Yung. “Ethical dimensions of quantification.” Social Science Information 58.2 (2019): 238-260.
  • Gorichanaz, Tim. “Auto-hermeneutics: A phenomenological approach to information experience.” Library & Information Science Research 39.1 (2017): 1-7.
  • Grønsund, Tor, and Margunn Aanestad. “Augmenting the algorithm: Emerging human-in-the-loop work configurations.” The Journal of Strategic Information Systems (2020): 101614.
  • Harbinja, Edina. “The ‘New (ish)’Property, Informational Bodies, and Postmortality.” Digital Afterlife: Death Matters in a Digital Age (2020): 89.
  • Heinrichs, Bert, and Simon B. Eickhoff. “Your evidence? Machine learning algorithms for medical diagnosis and prediction.” Human brain mapping 41.6 (2020): 1435-1444.
  • Helm, Paula, and Sandra Seubert. “Normative Paradoxes of Privacy. Literacy and Choice in Platform Societies.” Surveillance & Society (2020).
  • Hendrix, Burke A. “Where should we expect social change in non-ideal theory?.” Political Theory 41.1 (2013): 116-143.
  • Hinds, Pamela, Daniela Retelny, and Catherine Cramton. “In the flow, being heard, and having opportunities: Sources of power and power dynamics in global teams.” Proceedings of the 18th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing. 2015.
  • Howcroft, Debra, Nathalie Mitev, and Melanie Wilson. “What we may learn from the social shaping of technology approach.” Social theory and philosophy for information systems (2004): 329-371.
  • Hoy, D. “The temporality of power.” Foucault’s legacy (2009): 6-19.
  • Hudson, Nicky. “Gamete Donation and ‘Race’.” eLS (2001): 1-5.
  • Hyun, Jaehwan. “Racializing Chōsenjin: Science and Biological Speculations in Colonial Korea.” East Asian Science, Technology and Society: An International Journal 13.4 (2019): 489-510.
  • Hyun, Jaehwan. “Blood purity and scientific independence: blood science and postcolonial struggles in Korea, 1926–1975.” Science in Context 32.3 (2019): 239-260.
  • Introna, Lucas D., Niall Hayes, and Zaina Al-Hejin. “The negotiated order and electronic patient records: A sociomaterial perspective.” Journal of Information Technology 34.4 (2019): 333-349.
  • Jessop, Bob, et al. “Marxist approaches to power.” The Wiley-Blackwell companion to political sociology 33 (2012): 1.
  • Kaufmann, Mareile, Simon Egbert, and Matthias Leese. “Predictive policing and the politics of patterns.” The British Journal of Criminology 59.3 (2019): 674-692.
  • Keller, Susan Etta. “Crisis of authority: Medical rhetoric and transsexual identity.” Yale Journal of Law & Feminism 11 (1999): 51.
  • Kelly, Patty A. “The Development of American Psychiatry’s Professional Style: DSM-III’s” Common Language”.” Rhetoric of Health & Medicine 3.2 (2020): 220-248.
  • Koopman, Colin. “Genealogical pragmatism: How history matters for Foucault and Dewey.” Journal of the Philosophy of History 5.3 (2011): 533-561.
  • Krasmann, Susanne. “The logic of the surface: on the epistemology of algorithms in times of big data.” Information, Communication & Society (2020): 1-14.
  • Kumar, Smita, and Liz Cavallaro. “Researcher self-care in emotionally demanding research: A proposed conceptual framework.” Qualitative Health Research 28.4 (2018): 648-658.
  • Law, John, and Vicky Singleton. “ANT and Politics: Working in and on the World.” Qualitative Sociology 36.4 (2013): 485-502.
  • Lee, Yanki. “Design participation tactics: the challenges and new roles for designers in the co-design process.” Co-design 4.1 (2008): 31-50.
  • Lee, Francis, et al. “Algorithms as folding: Reframing the analytical focus.” Big Data & Society 6.2 (2019): 2053951719863819.
  • Lester, Jessica N., and Trena M. Paulus. “Performative acts of autism.” Discourse & Society 23.3 (2012): 259-273.
  • Lowrie, Ian. “Algorithmic rationality: Epistemology and efficiency in the data sciences.” Big Data & Society 4.1 (2017): 2053951717700925.
  • Ludwig, Gundula. “The aporia of promises of liberal democracy and the rise of authoritarian politics.” Distinktion: Journal of Social Theory (2019): 1-16.
  • M’charek, Amade, and Irene van Oorschot. “What about Race?.” In The Routledge Companion to Actor-Network Theory. Routledge, 2019. 235-245.
  • Mann, Monique, and Tobias Matzner. “Challenging algorithmic profiling: The limits of data protection and anti-discrimination in responding to emergent discrimination.” Big Data & Society 6.2 (2019): 2053951719895805.
  • Manning, Jimmie, and Danielle M. Stern. “Heteronormative bodies, queer futures: Toward a theory of interpersonal panopticism.” Information, Communication & Society 21.2 (2018): 208-223.
  • Matzner, Tobias. “Beyond data as representation: The performativity of Big Data in surveillance.” Surveillance & Society 14.2 (2016): 197-210.
  • McCarthy, John. “The state-of-the-art of CSCW: CSCW systems, cooperative work and organization.” Journal of Information technology 9.2 (1994): 73-83.
  • Mehozay, Yoav, and Eran Fisher. “The epistemology of algorithmic risk assessment and the path towards a non-penology penology.” Punishment & Society 21.5 (2019): 523-541.
  • Møhl, Perle. “Biometric Technologies, Data and the Sensory Work of Border Control.” Ethnos (2019): 1-16.
  • Moll, Tessa. “Making a Match: Curating Race in South African Gamete Donation.” Medical anthropology 38.7 (2019): 588-602.
  • Monea, Alexander. “Race and Computer Vision.” The Democratization of AI (2019): 189-208.
  • Montoya, Michael J. “Bioethnic conscription: Genes, race, and Mexicana/o ethnicity in diabetes research.” Cultural anthropology 22.1 (2007): 94-128.
  • Newman, Alyssa M. “Mixing and Matching: Sperm Donor Selection for Interracial Lesbian Couples.” Medical Anthropology (2019): 1-15.
  • Nicotra, Jodie. “Critical Review Essay: RSTM at the Intersection of Feminism and Identity.” Rhetoric of Health & Medicine 2.4 (2019): 463-476.
  • Ochs, Elinor, and Olga Solomon. “Autistic sociality.” Ethos 38.1 (2010): 69-92.
  • van Oorschot, Irene. “Culture, Milieu, Phenotype: Articulating Race in Judicial Sense-making Practices.” Social & Legal Studies (2020): 0964663920907992.
  • Pinchevski, Amit, and John Durham Peters. “Autism and new media: Disability between technology and society.” New Media & Society 18.11 (2016): 2507-2523.
  • Pink, Sarah, et al. “Broken data: Conceptualising data in an emerging world.” Big Data & Society 5.1 (2018): 2053951717753228.
  • Quiroga, Seline Szkupinski. “Blood is thicker than water: Policing donor insemination and the reproduction of whiteness.” Hypatia 22.2 (2007): 143-161.
  • Rajagopalan, Ramya M., Alondra Nelson, and Joan H. Fujimura. “Race and Science in the Twenty-First Century.” The Handbook of Science and Technology Studies (2016): 349.
  • Reardon, Jenny. ““Anti-colonial genomic practice?” Learning from the Genographic Project and the Chacmool Conference.” International Journal of Cultural Property 16.2 (2009): 205-212.
  • Risam, Roopika. “What Passes for Human?.” Bodies of Information: Intersectional Feminism and the Digital Humanities (2019).
  • Robson Day, Chris, and Kate Nicholls. ““They Don’t Think Like Us”: Exploring Attitudes of Non-Transgender Students Toward Transgender People Using Discourse Analysis.” Journal of Homosexuality (2019): 1-20.
  • Saad-Sulonen, Joanna, et al. “Unfolding participation over time: temporal lenses in participatory design.” CoDesign 14.1 (2018): 4-16.
  • Schaff, Kory P. “Agency and institutional rationality: Foucault’s critique of normativity.” Philosophy & social criticism 30.1 (2004): 51-71.
  • Schmidt, Kjeld, and Liam Bannon. “Constructing CSCW: The first quarter century.” Computer supported cooperative work (CSCW) 22.4-6 (2013): 345-372.
  • Sherry, John. “Cooperation and power.” Proceedings of the Fourth European Conference on Computer-Supported Cooperative Work ECSCW’95. Springer, Dordrecht, 1995.
  • Simon, Bernd, and Penelope Oakes. “Beyond dependence: An identity approach to social power and domination.” Human relations 59.1 (2006): 105-139.
  • Sluga, Hans. “‘Could you define the sense you give the word “political”’? Michel Foucault as a political philosopher.” History of the Human Sciences 24.4 (2011): 69-79.
  • Steedman, Robin, Helen Kennedy, and Rhianne Jones. “Complex ecologies of trust in data practices and data-driven systems.” Information, Communication & Society (2020): 1-16.
  • Stoetzler, Marcel, and Nira Yuval-Davis. “Standpoint theory, situated knowledge and the situated imagination.” Feminist theory 3.3 (2002): 315-333.
  • Symon, Gillian, Karen Long, and Judi Ellis. “The coordination of work activities: cooperation and conflict in a hospital context.” Computer Supported Cooperative Work (CSCW) 5.1 (1996): 1-31.
  • Tiisala, Tuomo. “Overcoming “The Present Limits of the Necessary”: Foucault’s Conception of a Critique.” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 55 (2017): 7-24.
  • Tummons, Jonathan. “Ontological Pluralism, Modes of Existence, and Actor-network Theory: Upgrading Latour with Latour.” Social Epistemology (2020): 1-11.
  • Tutton, Richard. “Opening the white box: Exploring the study of whiteness in contemporary genetics research.” Ethnic and racial studies 30.4 (2007): 557-569.
  • Vincent, Benjamin William. “Studying trans: recommendations for ethical recruitment and collaboration with transgender participants in academic research.” Psychology & Sexuality 9.2 (2018): 102-116.
  • de Vries, Patricia, and Willem Schinkel. “Algorithmic anxiety: Masks and camouflage in artistic imaginaries of facial recognition algorithms.” Big Data & Society 6.1 (2019): 2053951719851532.
  • Wadmann, Sarah, and Klaus Hoeyer. “Dangers of the digital fit: Rethinking seamlessness and social sustainability in data-intensive healthcare.” Big Data & Society 5.1 (2018): 2053951717752964.
  • Ward, Jane. “Dyke methods: A meditation on queer studies and the gay men who hate it.” Women’s Studies Quarterly (2016): 68-85.
  • Weale, Albert. “New Modes of Governance, Political Accountability and Public Reason 1.” Government and opposition 46.1 (2011): 58-80.
  • Wevers, Rosa. “Unmasking biometrics’ biases: Facing gender, race, class and ability in biometric data collection.” Tijdschrift voor Mediageschiedenis 21.2 (2018): 89-105.
  • Willcocks, L. “Foucault, power/knowledge and information systems: reconstructing the present.” Social theory and philosophy for information systems (2004): 238-296.
  • Wiggins, Tobias BD. “A Perverse Solution to Misplaced Distress: Trans Subjects and Clinical Disavowal.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 7.1 (2020): 56-76.
  • Wuest, Jo. “The scientific gaze in American transgender politics: contesting the meanings of sex, gender, and gender identity in the bathroom rights cases.” Politics & Gender 15.2 (2019): 336-360.
  • Xenitidou, Maria, and Kristrún Gunnarsdóttir. “The power of discourse: How agency is constructed and constituted in discourse of smart technologies, systems and associated developments.” Discourse & Society 30.3 (2019): 287-306.
  • Yergeau, Melanie. “Cassandra Isn’t Doing the Robot: On Risky Rhetorics and Contagious Autism.” Rhetoric Society Quarterly 50.3 (2020): 212-221.
  • Yli-Kauhaluoma, Sari. “Time at R&D Work: Types and strategies of time in the collaborative development of a chemical technology.” Time & Society 18.1 (2009): 130-153.
  • Yuval-Davis, Nira. “Belonging and the politics of belonging.” Patterns of prejudice 40.3 (2006): 197-214.
  • Yuval-Davis, Nira. “Theorizing identity: beyond the ‘us’ and ‘them’dichotomy.” Patterns of prejudice 44.3 (2010): 261-280.
  • Zamenopoulos, Theodore, et al. “Types, obstacles and sources of empowerment in co-design: the role of shared material objects and processes.” CoDesign (2019): 1-20.