Stuff I've been reading (March 2021)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in March 2021:

Books

  • Addelson, Kathryn Pyne. Moral passages: Toward a collectivist moral theory. Routledge, 1994.
  • Alcoff, Linda, and Elizabeth Potter, eds. Feminist epistemologies. Routledge, 2013.
  • Amoore, Louise. Cloud ethics: Algorithms and the attributes of ourselves and others. Duke University Press, 2020.
  • Avila, Renata, Sarah Harrison, and Angela Richter. Women, whistleblowing, WikiLeaks: A conversation. OR Books, 2018.
  • Baier, Annette. Moral prejudices: Essays on ethics. Harvard University Press, 1995.
  • Bratich, Jack Z. Conspiracy panics: Political rationality and popular culture. SUNY Press, 2008.
  • Brison, Susan J. Aftermath: Violence and the Remaking of a Self. Princeton University Press, 2002.
  • Bullough, Vern L. Science in the Bedroom. Basic Books, 1995.
  • Burt, Sandra, and Lorraine Code. Changing methods: Feminists transforming practice. Peterborough^ eON ON: Broadview Press, 1995.
  • Chang, Hasok. Inventing temperature: Measurement and scientific progress. Oxford University Press, 2004.
  • Christman, John. The politics of persons: Individual autonomy and socio-historical selves. Cambridge University Press, 2009.
  • Clandinin, Jean D. and Michael F. Connelly. Narrative inquiry: Experience and story in qualitative research. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 2000.
  • Code, Lorraine. Epistemic responsibility. SUNY Press, 2020.
  • Daum, Courtenay W. The Politics of Right Sex: Transgressive Bodies, Governmentality, and the Limits of Trans Rights. SUNY Press, 2020.
  • De Cecco, John P., and John P. Elia. If You Seduce a Straight Person, Can You Make Them Gay?: Issues in Biological Essentialism Versus Social Constructionism in Gay and Lesbian Identities. Vol. 24. No. 3-4. Psychology Press, 1993.
  • Devor, Aaron. FTM: Female-to-male transsexuals in society. Indiana University Press, 1997.
  • Dilts, Andrew. Punishment and inclusion: Race, membership, and the limits of American liberalism. Fordham Univ Press, 2014.
  • Ebeling, Mary FE. Healthcare and big data. London, New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016.
  • Kirsch, Gesa. Ethical dilemmas in feminist research: The politics of location, interpretation, and publication. SUNY Press, 1999.
  • Haraway, Donna J. Modest_Witness@ Second_Millennium. FemaleMan_Meets_OncoMouse: feminism and technoscience. Routledge, 2018.
  • Heyes, Cressida J. Self-transformations: Foucault, ethics, and normalized bodies. Oxford University Press, 2007.
  • Khalidi, Muhammad Ali. Natural categories and human kinds: Classification in the natural and social sciences. Cambridge University Press, 2013.
  • Laurelut, Mark Haydon, et al. Re-thinking autism: Diagnosis, identity and equality. Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2016.
  • Nownes, Anthony J. Organizing for transgender rights: Collective action, group development, and the rise of a new social movement. SUNY Press, 2019.
  • West, Isaac. Transforming citizenships: Transgender articulations of the law. Vol. 25. NYU Press, 2013.
  • Witt, Charlotte. The metaphysics of gender. Oxford University Press, 2011.

Papers and Chapters

  • Agostinho, Daniela, and Nanna Bonde Thylstrup. “‘If truth was a woman’: Leaky infrastructures and the gender politics of truth-telling.” Ephemera 19.4 (2019): 745-775.
  • Barnes, M. “Survivors, Consumers, or Experts by Experience? Assigned, Chosen, and Contested Identities in the Mental Health Service User Movement.” In The Identity Dilemma: Social Movements and Collective Identity. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. (2015): 131-149.
  • Beasley, Chris, and Carol Bacchi. “Envisaging a new politics for an ethical future: Beyond trust, care and generosity—towards an ethic ofsocial flesh’.” Feminist Theory 8.3 (2007): 279-298.
  • Bennett, Matthew. “Demoralizing Trust.” Ethics 131.3 (2021): 511-538.
  • Brinkmann, Svend. “Human kinds and looping effects in psychology: Foucauldian and hermeneutic perspectives.” Theory & Psychology 15.6 (2005): 769-791.
  • Campbell, Rebecca, Rachael Goodman-Williams, and McKenzie Javorka. “A trauma-informed approach to sexual violence research ethics and open science.” Journal of interpersonal violence 34.23-24 (2019): 4765-4793.
  • Chhabra, Gagan. “Insider, Outsider or an In-Betweener? Epistemological Reflections of a Legally Blind Researcher on Conducting Cross-National Disability Research.” Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research 22.1 (2020).
  • Doucet, Andrea, and Natasha Mauthner. “Knowing responsibly: Ethics, feminist epistemologies and methodologies.” Ethics in qualitative research (2002): 123-145.
  • Doucet, Andrea. “Feminist epistemologies and ethics: Ecological thinking, situated knowledges, epistemic responsibilities.” The SAGE Handbook of Qualitative Research Ethics. SAGE (2018): 73-88.
  • Elpes, Gustavo Santos. “Trans* Identities and Politics: Repertoires of Action, Political Cleavages, and Emerging Coalitions.” Politics and Governance 8.3 (2020): 301-311.
  • Epstein, Steven, and Laura Mamo. “The proliferation of sexual health: Diverse social problems and the legitimation of sexuality.” Social Science & Medicine 188 (2017): 176-190.
  • Fernández Pinto, Manuela. “Democratizing strategies for industry-funded medical research: a cautionary tale.” Philosophy of Science 85.5 (2018): 882-894.
  • Few, April L., Dionne P. Stephens, and Marlo Rouse‐Arnett. “Sister‐to‐sister talk: Transcending boundaries and challenges in qualitative research with Black women.” Family Relations 52.3 (2003): 205-215.
  • Furman, Katherine. “Emotions and Distrust in Science.” International Journal of Philosophical Studies 28.5 (2020): 713-730.
  • Gilliam, Shea Ellen, and Kate Swanson. “A cautionary tale: Trauma, ethics and mentorship in research in the USA.” Gender, Place & Culture 27.6 (2020): 903-911.
  • Glass, Ronald David, and Anne Newman. “Ethical and epistemic dilemmas in knowledge production: Addressing their intersection in collaborative, community-based research.” Theory and Research in Education 13.1 (2015): 23-37.
  • Glass, Ronald David, et al. “The ethical stakes of collaborative community-based social science research.” Urban Education 53.4 (2018): 503-531.
  • Groot, Barbara, Annyk Haveman, and Tineke Abma. “Relational, ethically sound co-production in mental health care research: epistemic injustice and the need for an ethics of care.” Critical Public Health (2020): 1-11.
  • Hacking, Ian. “Déraison.” History of the Human Sciences 24.4 (2011): 13-23.
  • Hagel, Nina. “Alternative authenticities: Thinking transgender without essence.” Theory & Event 20.3 (2017): 599-628.
  • Heath, Deborah. “Bodies, antibodies and modest interventions.” Technoscience: The politics of interventions (2007): 135-156.
  • Hendriks, Friederike, Dorothe Kienhues, and Rainer Bromme. “Trust in science and the science of trust.” Trust and communication in a digitized world. Springer, Cham, 2016. 143-159.
  • Herberg, Jeremias. “Control before collaborative research–Why phase zero is not co-designed but scripted.” Social epistemology 34.4 (2020): 395-407.
  • Johnson, I. G., and C. L. A. R. A. Crivellaro. “Opening research commissioning to civic participation: creating a community panel to review the social impact of HCI research proposals.” Proceedings of the 2021 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems-CHI’21. Newcastle University, 2021.
  • Johnson, Katherine. “Researching suicidal distress with LGBT communities in the UK: methodological and ethical reflections on a community-university knowledge exchange project.” Australian Community Psychologist 19.1 (2007): 112-123.
  • Johnson, Katherine. “Fragmented identities, frustrated politics: Transsexuals, lesbians and ‘queer’.” Journal of lesbian studies 11.1-2 (2007): 107-125.
  • Johnson, Katherine. “Transsexualism: Diagnostic dilemmas, transgender politics and the future of transgender care.” Out in psychology: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and queer perspectives (2007): 445-64.
  • Johnson, Katherine. “Changing sex, changing self: Theorizing transitions in embodied subjectivity.” Men and masculinities 10.1 (2007): 54-70.
  • Johnson, Katherine, and Antar Martínez Guzmán. “Rethinking concepts in participatory action research and their potential for social transformation: Post‐structuralist informed methodological reflections from LGBT and Trans‐collective projects.” Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology 23.5 (2013): 405-419.
  • Kenny, Kate, Marianna Fotaki, and Wim Vandekerckhove. “Whistleblower subjectivities: Organization and passionate attachment.” Organization Studies 41.3 (2020): 323-343.
  • Koskinen, Inkeri. “Where is the epistemic community? On democratisation of science and social accounts of objectivity.” Synthese 194.12 (2017): 4671-4686.
  • Langley, Joe, Daniel Wolstenholme, and Jo Cooke. “‘Collective making’as knowledge mobilisation: the contribution of participatory design in the co-creation of knowledge in healthcare.” BMC health services research 18.1 (2018): 1-10.
  • Ludwig, David. “Overlapping ontologies and Indigenous knowledge. From integration to ontological self-determination.” Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part A 59 (2016): 36-45.
  • Merriam, Sharan B., et al. “Power and positionality: Negotiating insider/outsider status within and across cultures.” International Journal of Lifelong Education 20.5 (2001): 405-416.
  • Nelson, Lynn Hankinson. “Epistemological communities.” In Feminist epistemologies (1993): 160.
  • Newman, Anne, and Ronald David Glass. “Ethical and epistemic dilemmas in empirically-engaged philosophy of education.” Studies in Philosophy and Education 34.2 (2015): 217-228.
  • Obasi, Chijioke. “Negotiating the insider/outsider continua: a Black female hearing perspective on research with Deaf women and Black women.” Qualitative Research 14.1 (2014): 61-78.
  • Origgi, Gloria. “Trust, authority and epistemic responsibility.” Theoria. Revista de Teoría, Historia y Fundamentos de La Ciencia 23.1 (2008): 35-44.
  • Origgi, Gloria. “Epistemic vigilance and epistemic responsibility in the liquid world of scientific publications.” Social Epistemology 24.3 (2010): 149-159.
  • Paphitis, Sharli Anne. “The possibility of addressing epistemic injustice through engaged research practice: Reflections on a menstruation related critical health education project in South Africa.” Critical Public Health 28.3 (2018): 363-372.
  • Pratt, Simon Frankel. “Reification, practice, and the ontological status of social facts.” International Theory 12.2 (2020): 231-237.
  • Rolin, Kristina H. “Objectivity, trust and social responsibility.” Synthese (2020): 1-21.
  • Rose, Diana, and Jayasree Kalathil. “Power, privilege and knowledge: The untenable promise of co-production in mental “health”.” Frontiers in Sociology 4 (2019): 57.
  • Saeidzadeh, Zara, and Sofia Strid. “Trans* Politics and the Feminist Project: Revisiting the Politics of Recognition to Resolve Impasses.” Politics and Governance 8.3 (2020): 312-320.
  • Simpson, Zacharia. “The truths we tell ourselves: Foucault on parrhesia.” Foucault Studies (2012): 99-115.
  • Tan, Edna, Angela Calabrese Barton, and Aerin Benavides. “Engineering for sustainable communities: Epistemic tools in support of equitable and consequential middle school engineering.” Science Education 103.4 (2019): 1011-1046.
  • Thurairajah, Kalyani. “Uncloaking the researcher: Boundaries in qualitative research.” Qualitative Sociology Review 1 (2019): 132-147.
  • Walker, Melanie, Carmen Martinez-Vargas, and Faith Mkwananzi. “Participatory action research: Towards (non-ideal) epistemic justice in a university in South Africa.” Journal of Global Ethics 16.1 (2020): 77-94.
  • Walker, Melanie, and Alejandra Boni. “Epistemic Justice, Participatory Research and Valuable Capabilities.” In Participatory Research, Capabilities and Epistemic Justice. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, 2020. 1-25.
  • Wallerstein, Nina, and Bonnie Duran. “The theoretical, historical and practice roots of CBPR.” In Community-based participatory research for health: Advancing social and health equity (2017): 17-29.
  • Williams, Oli, et al. “Lost in the shadows: reflections on the dark side of co-production.” Health research policy and systems 18 (2020): 1-10.
  • Zerilli, Linda MG. “Fact-Checking and Truth-Telling in an Age of Alternative Facts.” Le foucaldien 6.1 (2020).