Stuff I've been reading (May 2020)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in May 2020:

Books

  • Ahmed, Sara. On being included: Racism and diversity in institutional life. Duke University Press, 2012.
  • Anderson, Benedict. Imagined communities: Reflections on the origin and spread of nationalism. Verso books, 2006.
  • Barker, Joanne, ed. Critically sovereign: Indigenous gender, sexuality, and feminist studies. Duke University Press, 2017.
  • Bauman, Zygmunt. Wasted lives: Modernity and its outcasts. John Wiley & Sons, 2013.
  • Becker, Ernest. The denial of death. Simon and Schuster, 2007.
  • Boyarin, Jonathan. The Unconverted Self: Jews, Indians, and the Identity of Christian Europe. University of Chicago Press, 2009.
  • Celikates, Robin. Critique as social practice: Critical theory and social self-understanding. Rowman & Littlefield, 2018.
  • Collins, Harry. Tacit and explicit knowledge. University of Chicago Press, 2010.
  • Denny, Dallas. Current concepts in transgender identity. Routledge, 2013.
  • Dreger, Alice Domurat. Hermaphrodites and the medical invention of sex. Harvard University Press, 1998.
  • Ekins, Richard, and Dave King. The transgender phenomenon. Sage, 2006.
  • Eyal, Gil. The crisis of expertise. John Wiley & Sons, 2019.
  • Giraud, Eva Haifa. What Comes After Entanglement?: Activism, Anthropocentrism, and an Ethics of Exclusion. Duke University Press, 2019.
  • Hames-Garcia, Michael Roy. Identity complex: Making the case for multiplicity. University of Minnesota Press, 2011.
  • Jutel, Annemarie Goldstein. Putting a name to it: Diagnosis in contemporary society. John Hopkins University Press, 2014.
  • Mouffe, Chantal. The democratic paradox. Verso, 2000.
  • Najmabadi, Afsaneh. Professing selves: Transsexuality and same-sex desire in contemporary Iran. Duke University Press, 2014.
  • Namaste, Viviane. Sex change, social change: Reflections on identity, institutions, and imperialism. Canadian Scholars’ Press, 2011.
  • Plummer, Ken. Narrative Power: The Struggle for Human Value. John Wiley & Sons, 2019.
  • Proctor, Robert N., and Londa Schiebinger, eds. Agnotology: The Making and Unmaking of Ignorance. Stanford University Press, 2008.
  • Prosser, Jay. Second skins: The body narratives of transsexuality. Columbia University Press, 1998.
  • Rabinow, Paul. Making PCR: A story of biotechnology. University of Chicago Press, 2011.
  • Sassen, Saskia. Expulsions. Harvard University Press, 2014.
  • Sloterdijk, Peter. Critique of cynical reason. University of Minnesota Press, 2015.
  • Stein, Edward. The mismeasure of desire: The science, theory, and ethics of sexual orientation. Oxford University Press, 2001.
  • Tessman, Lisa. Burdened virtues: Virtue ethics for liberatory struggles. Oxford University Press, 2005.
  • Teston, Christa. Bodies in flux: Scientific methods for negotiating medical uncertainty. University of Chicago Press, 2017.
  • Trouillot, Michel-Rolph. Silencing the past: Power and the production of history. Beacon Press, 1995.
  • Waidzunas, Tom. The straight line: How the fringe science of ex-gay therapy reoriented sexuality. University of Minnesota Press, 2015.
  • Whooley, Owen. On the heels of ignorance: Psychiatry and the politics of not knowing. University of Chicago Press, 2019.
  • Zerubavel, Eviatar. Time maps: Collective memory and the social shape of the past. University of Chicago Press, 2012.

Papers and Chapters

  • Aboim, Sofia. “Fragmented Recognition: Gender Identity between Moral and Legal Spheres.” Social Politics: International Studies in Gender, State & Society (2020).
  • Akama, Yoko. “Being awake to Ma: designing in between-ness as a way of becoming with.” CoDesign 11.3-4 (2015): 262-274.
  • Athens, Lonnie. “Radical” and “symbolic” interactionism: Demarcating their borders.” Studies in Symbolic Interaction 42 (2013): 1-24.
  • Bechmann, Anja, and Geoffrey C. Bowker. “Unsupervised by any other name: Hidden layers of knowledge production in artificial intelligence on social media.” Big Data & Society 6.1 (2019): 2053951718819569.
  • van Berkel, Freek JFW, Julie E. Ferguson, and Peter Groenewegen. “Speedy delivery versus long-term objectives: How time pressure affects coordination between temporary projects and permanent organizations.” Long Range Planning 49.6 (2016): 661-673.
  • Berliner, David. “Social Thought & Commentary: The Abuses of Memory: Reflections on the Memory Boom in Anthropology.” Anthropological quarterly 78.1 (2005): 197-211.
  • BenMahmoud‐Jouini, Sihem, and Christophe Midler. “Unpacking the notion of prototype archetypes in the early phase of an innovation process.” Creativity and Innovation Management 29.1 (2020): 49-71.
  • Bradshaw, Sarah, Brian Linneker, and Erin Sanders-McDonagh. “It’s gender Jim, but not as we know it… A critical review of constructions of gendered knowledge of the Global South.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 27.2 (2020): 128-144.
  • Brickell, Chris. “Sexology, the homo/hetero binary, and the complexities of male sexual history.” Sexualities 9.4 (2006): 423-447.
  • van den Broek, A., and A. Rieple. “Using actor-network theory to reveal strategy processes in design firms.” The Design Management Academy: Research Perspectives on Creative Intersections 4 (2017): 1373-1390.
  • Brown, Andrew D., et al. “‘Invisible walls’ and ‘silent hierarchies’: A case study of power relations in an architecture firm.” Human relations 63.4 (2010): 525-549.
  • Carolan, Michael S. “Science, expertise, and the democratization of the decision-making process.” Society and Natural resources 19.7 (2006): 661-668.
  • Clegg, Stewart, and Fiona Wilson. “Power, technology and flexibility in organizations.” The Sociological Review 38.S1 (1990): 223-273.
  • Darwin, Helana. “Challenging the Cisgender/Transgender Binary: Nonbinary People and the Transgender Label.” Gender & Society (2020): 0891243220912256.
  • Decoteau, Claire Laurier, and Kelly Underman. “Adjudicating non-knowledge in the Omnibus Autism Proceedings.” Social Studies of Science 45.4 (2015): 471-500.
  • Dobransky, Kerry. “Labeling, looping, and social control: contextualizing diagnosis in mental health care.” Sociology of diagnosis. Advances in medical sociology 12 (2011): 111-131.
  • Frazer, Elizabeth, and Kimberly Hutchings. “The feminist politics of naming violence.” Feminist Theory 21.2 (2020): 199-216.
  • Frickel, Scott, et al. “Undone science: charting social movement and civil society challenges to research agenda setting.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 35.4 (2010): 444-473.
  • Funkenstein, Amos. “Collective memory and historical consciousness.” History and memory 1.1 (1989): 5-26.
  • Gill, Emily R. “Beyond Immutability: Sexuality and Constitutive Choice.” The Review of Politics 76.1 (2014): 93-117.
  • Gran, Anne-Britt, Peter Booth, and Taina Bucher. “To be or not to be algorithm aware: a question of a new digital divide?.” Information, Communication & Society (2020): 1-18.
  • Haider-Markel, Donald, et al. “Morality Politics and New Research on Transgender Politics and Public Policy.” The Forum. Vol. 17. No. 1. De Gruyter, 2019.
  • Hardesty, Monica J. “Ethnomethodology and symbolic interactionism: A critical comparison of temporal orientations.” Symbolic Interaction 5.1 (1982): 127-137.
  • Hayes, J., McCabe, R., Ford, T. and Russell, G. (2020), Drawing a line in the sand: affect and testimony in autism assessment teams in the UK. Sociology of Health and Illness, 42: 825-843. doi:10.1111/1467-9566.13063
  • Heisler, Martin O. “Challenged histories and collective self-concepts: politics in history, memory, and time.” The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 617.1 (2008): 199-211.
  • Henriksen, Anne, and Anja Bechmann. “Building truths in AI: Making predictive algorithms doable in healthcare.” Information, Communication & Society (2020): 1-15.
  • Huising, Ruthanne. “To hive or to hold? Producing professional authority through scut work.” Administrative Science Quarterly 60.2 (2015): 263-299.
  • Hunter, Shona. “Living documents: A feminist psychosocial approach to the relational politics of policy documentation.” Critical Social Policy 28.4 (2008): 506-528.
  • Hutson, David J. “Standing out/fitting in: Identity, appearance, and authenticity in gay and lesbian communities.” Symbolic Interaction 33.2 (2010): 213-233.
  • Huybrechts, Liesbeth, et al. “Visions that change. Articulating the politics of participatory design.” CoDesign 16.1 (2020): 3-16.
  • Jarzabkowski, Paula, Gary Burke, and Paul Spee. “Constructing spaces for strategic work: A multimodal perspective.” British Journal of Management 26 (2015): S26-S47.
  • Jaton, Florian. “We get the algorithms of our ground truths: Designing referential databases in digital image processing.” Social studies of science 47.6 (2017): 811-840.
  • Jones, Marjaana, and Ilkka Pietilä. “Personal perspectives on patient and public involvement–stories about becoming and being an expert by experience.” Sociology of Health & Illness (2020).
  • Joyce, Kelly Ann, Jennifer E. James, and Melanie Jeske. “Regimes of Patienthood: Developing an Intersectional Concept to Theorize Illness Experiences.” Engaging Science, Technology, and Society 6 (2020): 185-192.
  • Kolkman, Daan. “The (in)credibility of algorithmic models to non-experts”. Information, Communication & Society, (2020). DOI: 10.1080/1369118X.2020.1761860
  • Kotliar, Dan M. “Who Gets to Choose? On the Socio-algorithmic Construction of Choice.” Science, Technology, & Human Values (2020): 0162243920925147.
  • Lalor, Kay. “Encountering the Past: Grand Narratives, Fragmented Histories and LGBTI Rights ‘Progress’.” Law and Critique 30.1 (2019): 21-40.
  • Lane, Riki. ““We Are Here to Help” Who Opens the Gate for Surgeries?.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 5.2 (2018): 207-227.
  • Laster Pirtle, Whitney N. “Racial Capitalism: A Fundamental Cause of Novel Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic Inequities in the United States.” Health Education & Behavior (2020): 1090198120922942.
  • Lauff, Carlye A., et al. “The role of prototypes in communication between stakeholders.” Design Studies 66 (2020): 1-34.
  • Lerner, Ada, et al. “Privacy and Activism in the Transgender Community.” Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 2020.
  • Lindström, Kristina, and Åsa Ståhl. “Figurations of spatiality and temporality in participatory design and after–networks, meshworks and patchworking.” CoDesign 11.3-4 (2015): 222-235.
  • Lustiger Thaler, Henri. “Memory redux.” Current Sociology 61.5-6 (2013): 906-927.
  • Majone, Giandomenico. “Science and trans-science in standard setting.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 9.1 (1984): 15-22.
  • Mazmanian, Melissa, Ingrid Erickson, and Ellie Harmon. “Circumscribed time and porous time: Logics as a way of studying temporality.” Proceedings of the 18th ACM Conference on Computer Supported Cooperative Work & Social Computing. 2015.
  • Megill, Allan. “History, memory, identity.” History of the human sciences 11.3 (1998): 37-62.
  • Nelson, Nicole C. “The Methodologists: a Unique Category of Scientific Actors.” Engaging Science, Technology, and Society 6 (2020): 20-33.
  • Nieves Delgado, Abigail. “The Face of the Mexican: Race, Nation, and Criminal Identification in Mexico.” American Anthropologist.
  • Nieves Delgado, Abigail. “The Problematic Use of Race in Facial Reconstruction.” Science as Culture (2020): 1-26.
  • Olgado, Benedict Salazar, Lucy Pei, and Roderic Crooks. “Determining the Extractive Casting Mold of Intimate Platforms through Document Theory.” Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 2020.
  • Orlikowski, Wanda J., and JoAnne Yates. “It’s about time: Temporal structuring in organizations.” Organization science 13.6 (2002): 684-700.
  • Orr, Will, and Jenny L. Davis. “Attributions of ethical responsibility by Artificial Intelligence practitioners.” Information, Communication & Society (2020): 1-17.
  • Ottinger, Gwen. “Buckets of resistance: Standards and the effectiveness of citizen science.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 35.2 (2010): 244-270.
  • Palmås, Karl, and Otto von Busch. “Quasi-Quisling: co-design and the assembly of collaborateurs.” CoDesign 11.3-4 (2015): 236-249.
  • Parhi, Katariina. “Boyish Mannerisms and Womanly Coquetry: Patients with the Diagnosis of Transvestitismus in the Helsinki Psychiatric Clinic in Finland, 1954–68.” Medical history 62.1 (2018): 50-66.
  • Pedersen, Signe. “Staging negotiation spaces: A co-design framework.” Design Studies (2020).
  • Plummer, Ken. “Generational sexualities, subterranean traditions, and the hauntings of the sexual world: Some preliminary remarks.” Symbolic Interaction 33.2 (2010): 163-190.
  • Plummer, Ken. ““Whose Side Are We On?” Revisited: Narrative Power, Narrative Inequality, and a Politics of Narrative Humanity.” Symbolic Interaction (2019).
  • Poderi, Giacomo, et al. “Matters of concerns and user stories: ontological and methodological considerations for collaborative design processes.” CoDesign (2018): 1-13.
  • Polack, Peter. “AI Discourse in Policing Criticisms of Algorithms.” Evental Aesthetics: 57.
  • Poole, Ross. “Memory, history and the claims of the past.” Memory Studies 1.2 (2008): 149-166.
  • Portschy, J. “Times of power, knowledge and critique in the work of Foucault”. Time & Society, 29(2) . (2020): 392–419. https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X20911786
  • Przybylo, Ela. “Producing facts: Empirical asexuality and the scientific study of sex.” Feminism & Psychology 23.2 (2013): 224-242.
  • Puddephatt, Antony J. “Toward a radical interactionist account of science.” Studies in Symbolic Interaction 41 (2013): 53-82.
  • Repo, Jemima. “The biopolitical birth of gender: Social control, Hermaphroditism, and the new sexual apparatus.” Alternatives 38.3 (2013): 228-244.
  • Roberge, Jonathan, Marius Senneville, and Kevin Morin. “How to translate artificial intelligence? Myths and justifications in public discourse.” Big Data & Society 7.1 (2020): 2053951720919968.
  • Robinson, Christine M., and Sue E. Spivey. “Ungodly Genders: Deconstructing Ex-Gay Movement Discourses of “Transgenderism” in the US.” Social Sciences 8.6 (2019): 191.
  • Rolland, Knut H., and Margunn Aanestad. “The techno-political dynamics of information infrastructure development: Interpreting two cases of puzzling evidence.” 26th Information Systems Research Seminar in Scandinavia (IRIS) Porvoo, Finland. 2003.
  • Rosenberg, Charles E. “Contested boundaries: psychiatry, disease, and diagnosis.” Perspectives in biology and medicine 49.3 (2006): 407-424.
  • Rowell, Chris, Robin Gustafsson, and Marco Clemente. “How Institutions Matter “In Time”: The Temporal Structures of Practices and Their Effects on Practice Reproduction”. Research in the Sociology of Organizations 48 (2016): 303-327.
  • Rubin, Jennifer D., Lindsay Blackwell, and Terri D. Conley. “Fragile Masculinity: Men, Gender, and Online Harassment.” Proceedings of the 2020 CHI Conference on Human Factors in Computing Systems. 2020.
  • Sadjadi, Sahar. “Deep in the brain: identity and authenticity in pediatric gender transition.” Cultural Anthropology 34.1 (2019): 103-129.
  • Scott, Susan V., and Wanda J. Orlikowski. “Entanglements in Practice.” Mis Quarterly 38.3 (2014): 873-894.
  • Seitz, Tim. “The Temporality of Design Thinking.” In Design Thinking and the New Spirit of Capitalism. Palgrave Pivot, Cham, 2020. 17-44.
  • Stone, Amy L. “Gender panics about transgender children in religious right discourse.” Journal of LGBT youth 15.1 (2018): 1-15.
  • Stone, Amy L. “Frame Variation in Child Protectionist Claims: Constructions of Gay Men and Transgender Women as Strangers.” Social Forces 97.3 (2019): 1155-1176.
  • Stone, Amy L., et al. “Multiplicity, Race, and Resilience: Transgender and Non‐Binary People Building Community.” Sociological Inquiry 90.2 (2020): 226-248.
  • Sudmann, Andreas. “On the media-political dimension of artificial intelligence.” Digital Culture & Society 4.1 (2018): 181-200.
  • Sutton, Katie. “Kinsey and the Psychoanalysts: Cross-Disciplinary Knowledge Production in Post-War US Sex Research.” History of the Human Sciences, (2020). doi:10.1177/0952695120911597.
  • Tekin, Şerife. “The missing self in scientific psychiatry.” Synthese (2017): 1-19.
  • Tubaro, Paola, Antonio A. Casilli, and Marion Coville. “The trainer, the verifier, the imitator: Three ways in which human platform workers support artificial intelligence.” Big Data & Society 7.1 (2020): 2053951720919776.
  • Vipond, Evan. “Producing Trans economicus: Deploying Market Logic in the Fight for Trans Rights.” Canadian Review of Social Policy 77 (2017): 17-43.
  • Weinberg, Alvin M. “Science and trans-science.” Minerva (1972): 209-222.
  • Woods, Heather Suzanne. “Asking more of Siri and Alexa: feminine persona in service of surveillance capitalism.” Critical Studies in Media Communication 35.4 (2018): 334-349.