Stuff I've been reading (May 2022)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in May 2022:

Books and dissertations

  • Adams, Noah, and Bridget Liang. Trans and autistic: Stories from life at the intersection. Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2020.
  • Canaday, Margot, Nancy F. Cott, and Robert O. Self, eds. Intimate States: Gender, Sexuality, and Governance in Modern US History. University of Chicago Press, 2021.
  • Carel, Havi. Illness: The cry of the flesh. Routledge, 2018.
  • Castle, Stephanie. The Zenith Experience: Encounters & Memories in a Transgender Setting. Perceptions Press, 2005.
  • Clark, Andrew Edward. The madness is catching: Transsexuality and the Cartesian subject. University of Louisville, 2011.
  • Daston, Lorraine, ed. Biographies of scientific objects. University of Chicago Press, 2000.
  • Epstein, Steven. The Quest for Sexual Health: How an Elusive Ideal Has Transformed Science, Politics, and Everyday Life. University of Chicago Press, 2022.
  • Goldenberg, Maya J. Vaccine hesitancy: public trust, expertise, and the war on science. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2021.
  • Hodgkinson, Liz. Bodyshock: The Truth about Changing Sex. Virgin Books Limited, 1987.
  • Kuhl, Diana E. Death of the Clinic: Trans-informing the Clinical Gaze to Counter Epistemic Violence. Diss. University of Victoria, 2019.
  • Lindemann, Hilde. Holding and letting go: The social practice of personal identities. Oxford University Press, 2016.
  • Love, Heather. Underdogs: Social Deviance and Queer Theory. University of Chicago Press, 2021.
  • Manderson, Lenore, ed. Technologies of sexuality, identity and sexual health. Routledge, 2012.
  • McWhorter, Ladelle. Racism and sexual oppression in Anglo-America: A genealogy. Indiana University Press, 2009.
  • Minson, Jeffrey. Genealogies of morals: Nietzsche, Foucault, Donzelot and the eccentricity of ethics. Springer, 1985.
  • Moses, Jacob David. Medical Regret without Remorse: A Moral History of Harm, Responsibility, and Emotion in American Surgery since 1945. Diss. 2020.
  • Petryna, Adriana. Life Exposed. Princeton University Press, 2013.
  • Richman, Kenneth A. Ethics and the metaphysics of medicine: Reflections on health and beneficence. MIT Press, 2004.
  • Skrapec, Candice A. Psychological self perception in transsexual patients. MS thesis. University of Calgary, 1980.
  • Solomon, Miriam. Making medical knowledge. Oxford University Press, USA, 2015.
  • Sulik, Gayle A. Pink ribbon blues: How breast cancer culture undermines women’s health. Oxford University Press, 2010.
  • Walker, Margaret Urban. What is Reparative Justice?. Marquette University Press, 2010.
  • Wilson, Margot and Aaron Devor, eds. Glimmerings: Trans Elders Tell Their Stories. TransGender Publishing, 2019.
  • Wodda, Aimee. “What Did We Get When We Got Sex?”: Narratives of Sex, Gender, and Sexuality in Ulane v. Eastern Airlines. Diss. University of Illinois at Chicago, 2018.
  • Zeavin, Hannah. The distance cure: A history of teletherapy. MIT Press, 2021.

Papers and Chapters

  • Adams, Noah, et al. “Guidance and ethical considerations for undertaking transgender health research and institutional review boards adjudicating this research.” Transgender health 2.1 (2017): 165-175.
  • Appelbaum, Paul S., Loren H. Roth, and Charles Lidz. “The therapeutic misconception: informed consent in psychiatric research.” International journal of law and psychiatry 5.3-4 (1982): 319-329.
  • Appelbaum, Paul S., et al. “False hopes and best data: consent to research and the therapeutic misconception.” The Hastings Center Report 17.2 (1987): 20-24.
  • Azadi, Bahar, and Zara Saeidzadeh. “Trans subjectivities in Iran: epistemic misrecognition.” Journal of Gender Studies (2022): 1-12.
  • Ben-Arie, O., et al. “The effect of research on readmission to a psychiatric hospital.” The British Journal of Psychiatry 156.1 (1990): 37-39.
  • Blumenthal, David. “Federal policy toward health care technology: the case of the National Center.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society (1983): 584-613.
  • Bremer, Signe. “Penis as risk: A queer phenomenology of two swedish transgender women’s narratives on gender correction.” Somatechnics 3.2 (2013): 329-350.
  • Brives, Charlotte. “Identifying ontologies in a clinical trial.” Social Studies of Science 43.3 (2013): 397-416.
  • Buchanan, Roderick D. “Legislative warriors: American psychiatrists, psychologists, and competing claims over psychotherapy in the 1950s.” Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 39.3 (2003): 225-249.
  • Carey, Brian. “The Language of Public Reason.” Journal of Social Philosophy (2020).
  • Carr, E. Summerson. “Enactments of expertise.” Annual Review of Anthropology 39 (2010): 17-32.
  • Case, Mary Anne. “Trans formations in the Vatican’s war on “gender ideology”.” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 44.3 (2019): 639-664.
  • Castel, Patrick. “What’s behind a guideline? Authority, competition and collaboration in the French oncology sector.” Social Studies of Science 39.5 (2009): 743-764.
  • Chalmers, Thomas C. “The clinical trial.” The Milbank Memorial Fund Quarterly. Health and Society 59.3 (1981): 324-339.
  • Christie, David RH, Christopher F. Sharpley, and Vicki Bitsika. “Why do patients regret their prostate cancer treatment? A systematic review of regret after treatment for localized prostate cancer.” Psycho‐Oncology 24.9 (2015): 1002-1011.
  • Corrigan, Oonagh. “Empty ethics: the problem with informed consent.” Sociology of health & illness 25.7 (2003): 768-792.
  • Cox, Jennifer, et al. ““Your rights end where mine begin”: A mixed-methods study of moral foundations theory and support for bathroom bills.” Sexuality Research and Social Policy 19.2 (2022): 453-469.
  • Cromer, Risa. “Saving: Towards a Feminist Reckoning.” Feminist Anthropology (2022).
  • Cruz, Taylor M. “Assessing access to care for transgender and gender nonconforming people: a consideration of diversity in combating discrimination.” Social science & medicine 110 (2014): 65-73.
  • Dębińska, Maria. “Diagnosing transsexualism, diagnosing society: The blurred genres of Polish sexology in the 1970s and 1980s.” In Queers in State Socialism. Routledge, 2020. 59-73.
  • Djulbegovic, Mia, et al. “Thinking styles and regret in physicians.” PLoS One 10.8 (2015): e0134038.
  • Dotson, Kristie. “Concrete flowers: Contemplating the profession of philosophy.” Hypatia 26.2 (2011): 403-409.
  • Dotson, Kristie. “Radical love: Black philosophy as deliberate acts of inheritance.” The Black Scholar 43.4 (2013): 38-45.
  • Easter, Michele M., et al. “The many meanings of care in clinical research.” Sociology of health & illness 28.6 (2006): 695-712.
  • Engelstein, Gil, and Iris Rachamimov. “Crossing borders and demolishing boundaries: the connected history of the Israeli transgender community 1953–1986.” Journal of Modern Jewish Studies 18.2 (2019): 142-159.
  • Epstein, Richard S., and David S. Janowsky. “Research on the psychiatric ward: The effects on conflicting priorities.” Archives of General Psychiatry 21.4 (1969): 455-463.
  • Fiorilli, Olivia. “Reproductive injustice and the politics of trans future in France.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 6.4 (2019): 579-592.
  • Garrett, Cal Lee. “Finding natural variation: assembling underdetermined evidence of gender dysphoria, doing trans therapeutics.” BioSocieties (2020): 1-25.
  • Gerritse, Karl, et al. “Moral challenges in transgender care: A thematic analysis based on a focused ethnography.” Archives of Sexual Behavior 47.8 (2018): 2319-2333.
  • Gill-Peterson, Jules. “Toward a historiography of the lesbian transsexual, or the TERF’s nightmare.” Journal of Lesbian Studies 26.2 (2022): 133-147.
  • Glew, Liana. “Documenting insanity: Paperwork and patient narratives in psychiatric history.” History of the Human Sciences (2022): 09526951211068975.
  • Gressgård, Randi. “The veiled Muslim, the anorexic and the transsexual: What do they have in common?.” European Journal of Women’s Studies 13.4 (2006): 325-341.
  • Gressgård, Randi. “When trans translates into tolerance-or was it monstrous? Transsexual and transgender identity in liberal humanist discourse.” Sexualities 13.5 (2010): 539-561.
  • Hansbury, Griffin. “The masculine vaginal: Working with queer men’s embodiment at the transgender edge.” Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 65.6 (2017): 1009-1031.
  • Hansbury, Griffin. “Unthinkable Anxieties: Reading Transphobic Countertransferences in a Century of Psychoanalytic Writing.” TSQ: Transgender Studies Quarterly 4.3-4 (2017): 384-404.
  • Harrington, Christina, Sheena Erete, and Anne Marie Piper. “Deconstructing community-based collaborative design: Towards more equitable participatory design engagements.” Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 3.CSCW (2019): 1-25.
  • Hay-Smith, E. Jean C., et al. “Once a clinician, always a clinician: a systematic review to develop a typology of clinician-researcher dual-role experiences in health research with patient-participants.” BMC medical research methodology 16.1 (2016): 1-17.
  • Hines, Sally. “Sex wars and (trans) gender panics: Identity and body politics in contemporary UK feminism.” The Sociological Review 68.4 (2020): 699-717.
  • Hoeyer, Klaus, and Linda F. Hogle. “Informed consent: the politics of intent and practice in medical research ethics.” Annual Review of Anthropology 43 (2014): 347-362.
  • Honkasalo, Julian. “When boys will not be boys: American eugenics and the formation of gender nonconformity as psychopathology.” NORMA 11.4 (2016): 270-286.
  • Johnston, I. D. A., et al. “Ethical problems of repetitive research.” Journal of medical ethics 3 (1977): 14-17.
  • Ju, Esther. “Unclear Conscience: How Catholic Hospitals and Doctors Are Claiming Conscientious Objections to Deny Healthcare to Transgender Patients.” University of Illinois Law Review (2020): 1289.
  • Kłonkowska, Anna M. “Masculinity: Assigned–reassigned–socially constructed: The social reception of trans masculinity in Poland.” Men and Masculinities 21.2 (2018): 210-229.
  • KŁonkowska, Anna M. “Making transgender count in Poland: Disciplined individuals and circumscribed populations.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 2.1 (2015): 123-135.
  • Knaapen, Loes. “Being ‘evidence-based’in the absence of evidence: The management of non-evidence in guideline development.” Social Studies of Science 43.5 (2013): 681-706.
  • Kocsis, James H., et al. “The effect of psychobiological research on treatment outcome: A controlled study.” Archives of General Psychiatry 38.5 (1981): 511-515.
  • Kondelin, Sade. ““If I could touch it, it would be something sticky and cold”.” lambda nordica 22.1 (2017): 15-37.
  • Lampe, Nik M., Shannon K. Carter, and J. E. Sumerau. “Continuity and change in gender frames: The case of transgender reproduction.” Gender & Society 33.6 (2019): 865-887.
  • Lewis, Daniel C., et al. “Transitioning Opinion? Assessing the Dynamics of Public Attitudes Toward transgender Rights.” Public Opinion Quarterly (2022).
  • Lewis, Penney. “The lawfulness of gender reassignment surgery.” American Journal of Legal History 58.1 (2018): 56-85.
  • Lidz, Charles W., and Paul S. Appelbaum. “The therapeutic misconception: problems and solutions.” Medical care (2002): V55-V63.
  • Loeb, Elizabeth. “Cutting it off: Bodily integrity, identity disorders, and the sovereign stakes of corporeal desire in US law.” Women’s Studies Quarterly 36.3/4 (2008): 44-63.
  • Janion, Ludmiła. ““Transsexuality” and gender ratio in Poland: A case study on the East/West dichotomy.” Journal of Homosexuality (2022): 1-21.
  • McLean, Craig. “The Growth of the Anti-Transgender Movement in the United Kingdom. The Silent Radicalization of the British Electorate.” International Journal of Sociology 51.6 (2021): 473-482.
  • McLelland, Mark. “From the stage to the clinic: changing transgender identities in post-war Japan.” Japan Forum. Vol. 16. No. 1. Taylor & Francis Ltd, 2004.
  • Miller, Tina, and Mary Boulton. “Changing constructions of informed consent: Qualitative research and complex social worlds.” Social science & medicine 65.11 (2007): 2199-2211.
  • Mitchell, Matthew, and Juliet Rogers. “Prohibiting the Queer Body: Gender Affirmation, Female Genital Cutting, and the Promise of Gender Intelligibility.” Critical Criminology 29.4 (2021): 707-721.
  • Molofsky, Merle. “Co-opting the body of the identified other: The hysterization of otherness in relation to self.” The Psychoanalytic Review 106.1 (2019): 49-71.
  • Montgomery, Catherine M., and Robert Pool. “From ‘trial community’to ‘experimental publics’: how clinical research shapes public participation.” Critical Public Health 27.1 (2017): 50-62.
  • Mukerji, Chandra. “Cultural genealogy: Method for a historical sociology of culture or cultural sociology of history.” Cultural Sociology 1.1 (2007): 49-71.
  • Murphy-Hollies, Kathleen. “When a hybrid account of disorder is not enough: The case of gender dysphoria.” European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 17.2 (2021): S6-26.
  • Neuhaus, Jessamyn. “The importance of being orgasmic: Sexuality, gender, and marital sex manuals in the United States, 1920-1963.” Journal of the History of Sexuality 9.4 (2000): 447-473.
  • O’Shea, Saoirse Caitlin. “If I knew then what I know now.” Gender, Work & Organization 29.2 (2022): 626-638.
  • Perry, Seymour. “The brief life of the National Center for Health Care Technology.” New England Journal of Medicine 307.17 (1982): 1095-1100.
  • Podoletz, Lena. “We have to talk about emotional AI and crime.” AI & SOCIETY (2022): 1-16.
  • Porchat, Patricia, and Beatriz Santos. ““Are We Safe Analysts?” Cisgender Countertransferential Fantasies in the Treatment of Transgender Patients.” The Psychoanalytic Review 108.4 (2021): 411-431.
  • Rabeharisoa, Vololona, and Pascale Bourret. “Staging and weighting evidence in biomedicine: Comparing clinical practices in cancer genetics and psychiatric genetics.” Social Studies of Science 39.5 (2009): 691-715.
  • Saketopoulou, Avgi. “Minding the gap: Intersections between gender, race, and class in work with gender variant children.” Psychoanalytic Dialogues 21.2 (2011): 192-209.
  • Saketopoulou, Avgi. “Mourning the body as bedrock: Developmental considerations in treating transsexual patients analytically.” Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 62.5 (2014): 773-806.
  • Saketopoulou, Avgi. “On Trying to Pass off Transphobia as Psychoanalysis and Cruelty as “Clinical Logic”.” The Psychoanalytic Quarterly (2022): 1-14.
  • Schilling, Rebecca, and Stephen T. Casper. “Of psychometric means: Starke R. Hathaway and the popularization of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory.” Science in context 28.1 (2015): 77-98.
  • Schlich, Thomas. “Surgery, science and modernity: Operating rooms and laboratories as spaces of control.” History of Science 45.3 (2007): 231-256.
  • Scull, Andrew. “Contending professions: Sciences of the brain and mind in the United States, 1850–2013.” Science in Context 28.1 (2015): 131-161.
  • Sekula, Allan. “The body and the archive.” October 39 (1986): 3-64.
  • Shildrick, Margrit. “This body which is not one: Dealing with differences.” Body & Society 5.2-3 (1999): 77-92.
  • Shildrick, Margrit. “Corporeal cuts: Surgery and the psycho-social.” Body & Society 14.1 (2008): 31-46.
  • Slagstad, Ketil. “The political nature of sex—transgender in the history of medicine.” New England Journal of Medicine 384.11 (2021): 1070-1074.
  • Slagstad, Ketil. “Society as Cause and Cure: The Norms of Transgender Social Medicine.” Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry 45.3 (2021): 456-478.
  • Soley-Beltran, Patrícia, and Gerard Coll-Planas. “‘Having words for everything’. Institutionalizing gender migration in Spain (1998-2008).” Sexualities 14.3 (2011): 334-353.
  • Stroumsa, Daphna, et al. “Transphobia rather than education predicts provider knowledge of transgender health care.” Medical education 53.4 (2019): 398-407.
  • Sturges, Jane S., Donald R. Sweeney, and David Pickar. “A follow-up neurobiological study: why volunteer?.” Journal of medical ethics 5.1 (1979): 9-12.
  • Sullivan, Nikki. “Transsomatechnics and the matter of ‘Genital Modifications’.” Australian Feminist Studies 24.60 (2009): 275-286.
  • Swazey, Judith P., and Renée C. Fox. “Remembering the” golden years” of patient-oriented clinical research: a collective conversation.” Perspectives in biology and medicine 47.4 (2004): 487-504.
  • Thévenot, Laurent. “Postscript to the special issue: Governing life by standards: A view from engagements.” Social Studies of Science 39.5 (2009): 793-813.
  • Williams, Cristan. “The ontological woman: A history of deauthentication, dehumanization, and violence.” The Sociological Review 68.4 (2020): 718-734.
  • Wilson, Mandy. “I am the Prince of Pain, for I am a Princess in the Brain’: Liminal Transgender Identities, Narratives and the Elimination of Ambiguities.” Sexualities 5.4 (2002): 425-448.
  • Wong, Jennifer. “The History of Technology Assessment and Comparative Effectiveness Research for Drugs and Medical Devices and the Role of the Federal Government.” Biotechnology Law Report 33.6 (2014): 221-248.