Stuff I've been reading (October 2022)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in October 2022:

Books and dissertations

  • Ahmed, Sara. Queer Phenomenology: Orientations, Objects, Others. Duke University Press, 2006.
  • Ahmed, Sara. Complaint!. Duke University Press, 2021.
  • Ainsworth-Vaughn, Nancy. Claiming power in doctor-patient talk. Oxford University Press, 1998.
  • Allen, Amy, and Eduardo Mendieta, eds. From alienation to forms of life: the critical theory of Rahel Jaeggi. Pennsylvania State Press, 2018.
  • Ashley, Florence. Banning Transgender Conversion Practices: A Legal and Policy Analysis. UBC Press, 2022.
  • Atkins, Kim, and Catriona Mackenzie. Practical identity and narrative agency. Routledge, 2013.
  • Baghramian, Maria, ed. From Trust to Trustworthiness. Routledge, 2020.
  • Bluhm, Robyn, ed. Knowing and acting in medicine. Rowman & Littlefield, 2016.
  • Bosk, Charles L. Forgive and Remember: Managing Medical Failure. University of Chicago Press, 1979.
  • Bow, Leslie. Racist Love: Asian Abstraction and the Pleasures of Fantasy. Duke University Press, 2021.
  • Brown, Wendy. Regulating aversion. Princeton University Press, 2009.
  • Burkhardt, Marcus, et al., eds. Interrogating Datafication: Towards a Praxeology of Data. Vol. 3. transcript Verlag, 2022.
  • Carter, Julian B. The heart of whiteness: Normal sexuality and race in America, 1880–1940. Duke University Press, 2007.
  • Connolly, William E. Climate machines, Fascist drives, and truth. Duke University Press, 2019.
  • Delanty, Gerard. Critical theory and social transformation: Crises of the present and future possibilities. Routledge, 2020.
  • Dumes, Abigail A. Divided Bodies: Lyme Disease, Contested Illness, and Evidence-Based Medicine. Duke University Press, 2020.
  • Fraser, Nancy, and Rahel Jaeggi. Capitalism: A conversation in critical theory. John Wiley & Sons, 2018.
  • Frickel, Scott, and Kelly Moore, eds. The new political sociology of science: Institutions, networks, and power. University of Wisconsin Press, 2006.
  • Forsythe, Diana. Studying those who study us: An anthropologist in the world of artificial intelligence. Stanford University Press, 2001.
  • Giffort, Danielle. Acid revival: The psychedelic renaissance and the quest for medical legitimacy. University of Minnesota Press, 2020.
  • Goldie, Terry. The man who invented gender: engaging the ideas of John Money. UBC Press, 2014.
  • Greenblatt, Rachel L. To tell their children: Jewish communal memory in early modern Prague. Stanford University Press, 2014.
  • Halpern, Sydney A. Lesser Harms: the morality of risk in medical research. University of Chicago Press, 2006.
  • Hansson, Kristofer, and Rachel Irwin. Movement of knowledge: Medical humanities perspectives on medicine, science, and experience. Kriterium, 2020.
  • Jasanoff, Sheila, ed. States of knowledge. Abingdon, UK: Taylor & Francis, 2004.
  • Jones, David S. Broken hearts: The tangled history of cardiac care. JHU Press, 2013.
  • Maynard, Douglas W., and Jason Turowetz. Autistic Intelligence: Interaction, Individuality, and the Challenges of Diagnosis. University of Chicago Press, 2022.
  • Mulvin, Dylan. Proxies: The cultural work of standing in. MIT Press, 2021.
  • Murphy, Brian Michael. We the Dead: Preserving Data at the End of the World. UNC Press Books, 2022.
  • Paget, Marianne A. The unity of mistakes: A phenomenological interpretation of medical work. Temple University Press, 2004.
  • Rosenberg, Charles E. Explaining epidemics and Other Studies in the History of Medicine. Cambridge University Press, 1992.
  • Rosenberg, Charles E. Our present complaint: American medicine, then and now. JHU Press, 2007.
  • Schlich, Thomas, and Ulrich Tröhler. The risks of medical innovation: risk perception and assessment in historical context. Routledge, 2004.
  • Vogel, Morris J., and Charles E. Rosenberg. The Therapeutic Revolution: Essays in the Social History of American Medicine. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1979.
  • Will, Catherine, and Tiago Moreira, eds. Medical proofs, social experiments: Clinical trials in shifting contexts. Routledge, 2016.
  • Wynne, Brian. Rationality and ritual: Participation and exclusion in nuclear decision-making. Routledge, 2013.

Papers and Chapters

  • Ankerson, Megan Sapnar. “Read/write the digital archive: Strategies for historical web research.” In Digital research confidential: The secrets of studying behavior online (2015): 29-54.
  • Bamberg, Michael, and Nancy Budwig. “Therapeutic misconceptions: when the voices of caring and research are misconstrued as the voice of curing.” Ethics & Behavior 2.3 (1992): 165-184.
  • Baumeister, Alan. “The Tulane Electrical Brain Stimulation Program: a historical case study in medical ethics.” Journal of the History of the Neurosciences 9.3 (2000): 262-278.
  • Cheek, Ryan, Sam Clem, and Avery C. Edenfield. “Trans* Vulnerability and Digital Research Ethics.” The 39th ACM International Conference on Design of Communication. 2021.
  • Davis, Emmalon. “On epistemic appropriation.” Ethics 128.4 (2018): 702-727.
  • Dings, Roy, and Şerife Tekin. “A philosophical exploration of experience-based expertise in mental health care.” Philosophical Psychology (2022): 1-20.
  • Doroshow, Deborah Blythe. “Performing a cure for schizophrenia: insulin coma therapy on the wards.” Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences 62.2 (2007): 213-243.
  • Farkash, Lexie. “Gender, Not Genitals: The Medical Necessity of Gender Affirming Housing for Incarcerated Transgender People.” Quinnipiac Health Law Journal 25 (2022): 259.
  • Frickel, Scott, and Neil Gross. “A general theory of scientific/intellectual movements.” American sociological review 70.2 (2005): 204-232.
  • Forsythe, Diana E. “Engineering knowledge: The construction of knowledge in artificial intelligence.” Social studies of science 23.3 (1993): 445-477.
  • Genin, Konstantin, and Thomas Grote. “Randomized controlled trials in medical AI: A methodological critique.” Philosophy of Medicine 2.1 (2021): 1-15.
  • Genske, Anna, and Sabrina Engel-Glatter. “Rethinking risk assessment for emerging technology first-in-human trials.” Medicine, health care and philosophy 19.1 (2016): 125-139.
  • Gergel, Tania Louise. “Too similar, too different: the paradoxical dualism of psychiatric stigma.” The Psychiatric Bulletin 38.4 (2014): 148-151.
  • Goldenberg, Maya J. “Evidence-based ethics? On evidence-based practice and the” empirical turn” from normative bioethics.” BMC Medical Ethics 6.1 (2005): 1-9.
  • Goldenberg, Maya J. “On evidence and evidence-based medicine: lessons from the philosophy of science.” Social science & medicine 62.11 (2006): 2621-2632.
  • Goldie, Peter. “Empathy with one’s past.” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 49 (2011): 193-207.
  • Greco, Monica. “The politics of indeterminacy and the right to health.” Theory, Culture & Society 21.6 (2004): 1-22.
  • Greene, Mike. “Adree Edmo, The Eighth Amendment, and Abolition: Evaluating the Fight for Gender-Affirming Care in Prisons.” William & Mary Journal of Race Gender & Social Justice. 28 (2021): 445.
  • Gupta, S. (2022), Risk. Feminist Anthropology. https://doi.org/10.1002/fea2.12106
  • Ha, Nathan. “Detecting and teaching desire: phallometry, Freund, and behaviorist sexology.” Osiris 30.1 (2015): 205-227.
  • Halperin, David M. “The normalization of queer theory.” Journal of homosexuality 45.2-4 (2003): 339-343.
  • Heimer, Carol A. “‘Wicked’ ethics: Compliance work and the practice of ethics in HIV research.” Social science & medicine 98 (2013): 371-378.
  • Henderson, Gail E., et al. “Clinical trials and medical care: defining the therapeutic misconception.” PLoS medicine 4.11 (2007): e324.
  • Hogle, Linda F. “Standardization across non-standard domains: The case of organ procurement.” Science, Technology, & Human Values 20.4 (1995): 482-500.
  • Jagose, Annamarie. “The trouble with antinormativity.” differences 26.1 (2015): 26-47.
  • Jones, Melinda. “Adolescent gender identity and the courts.” The International Journal of Children’s Rights 13.1-2 (2005): 121-148.
  • Kinsman, Gary. ““Character Weaknesses” and” Fruit Machines”: Towards an Analysis of The Anti-Homosexual Security Campaign in the Canadian Civil Service.” Labour/Le Travailleur 35 (1995): 133-162.
  • Lewis, Jenny M. “Being around and knowing the players: networks of influence in health policy.” Social science & medicine 62.9 (2006): 2125-2136.
  • Magrath, Walker J. “The Fall of the Nation’s First Gender-Affirming Surgery Clinic.” Annals of Internal Medicine (2022).
  • Mason, Rebecca. “Two kinds of unknowing.” Hypatia 26.2 (2011): 294-307.
  • Medina, José. “Group agential epistemic injustice: Epistemic disempowerment and critical defanging of group epistemic agency” Philosophical Issues (2022).
  • Montgomery, Catherine M. “Clinical trials and the drive to material standardisation:’Extending the rails’ or reinventing the wheel?.” Science and Technology Studies 30.4 (2017).
  • Montgomery, Catherine M. “From standardization to adaptation: Clinical trials and the moral economy of anticipation.” Science as Culture 26.2 (2017): 232-254.
  • Morris, Rae, and Celeste Borja. “Navigating the clinician-researcher role in health social work: Reflections from practice.” International Social Work (2022): 00208728211065706.
  • Mueller, Mary‐Rose. “Science versus care: Physicians, nurses, and the dilemma of clinical research.” Sociology of Health & Illness 19.19B (1997): 57-78.
  • Povinelli, Elizabeth A. “Transgender creeks and the three figures of power in late liberalism.” differences 26.1 (2015): 168-187.
  • Robinson, Daniel J., and David Kimmel. “The queer career of homosexual security vetting in cold war Canada.” Canadian Historical Review 75.3 (1994): 319-345.
  • Rosengarten, Marsha, and Martin Savransky. “A careful biomedicine? Generalization and abstraction in RCTs.” Critical Public Health 29.2 (2019): 181-191.
  • Schafer, Valérie, Francesca Musiani, and Marguerite Borelli. “Negotiating the Web of the Past.” French Journal for Media Research 6 (2016)
  • Scull, Andrew. “Somatic treatments and the historiography of psychiatry.” History of Psychiatry 5.17 (1994): 001-12.
  • Sewaybricker, Luciano E., and Gustavo M. Massola. “Against well-being: A critique of positive psychology.” History of the Human Sciences (2022): 09526951221114733.
  • Strauss, Anselm, et al. “Sentimental work in the technologized hospital.” Sociology of Health & Illness 4.3 (1982): 254-278.
  • Vignola-Gagné, Etienne. “Argumentative practices in science, technology and innovation policy: The case of clinician-scientists and translational research.” Science and Public Policy 41.1 (2014): 94-106.
  • Wiegman, Robyn, and Elizabeth A. Wilson. “Introduction: Antinormativity’s queer conventions.” differences 26.1 (2015): 1-25.