Stuff I've been reading (September 2021)

By Os Keyes

Things I finished reading in September 2021:

Books

  • Allen, Amy The End of Progress: Decolonizing the Normative Foundations of Critical Theory. Columbia University Press, 2016.
  • Campbell, Sue, and Letitia Maynell, eds. Embodiment and agency. Pennsylvania State Press, 2010.
  • Care, Norman S. Living with one’s past: Personal fates and moral pain. Rowman & Littlefield, 1996.
  • Cremonesi, Laura, et al., eds. Foucault and the Making of Subjects. Rowman & Littlefield, 2016.
  • Dillon, Robin S. Dignity, character and self-respect. Routledge, 2013.
  • Diprose, Rosalyn. Corporeal generosity: on giving with Nietzsche, Merleau-Ponty, and Levinas. Suny Press, 2012.
  • Govier, Trudy. Forgiveness and revenge. Routledge, 2011.
  • Hamington, Maurice, ed. Feminist Interpretations of Jane Addams. Penn State Press, 2010.
  • Hines, Sally, and Tam Sanger, eds. Transgender identities: Towards a social analysis of gender diversity. Taylor & Francis, 2010.
  • Hong, Sun-ha. Technologies of Speculation. New York University Press, 2020.
  • Jaeggi, Rahel. Critique of forms of life. Harvard University Press, 2018.
  • Jorgensen, Christine. Christine Jorgensen: personal autobiography. PS Eriksson, 1967.
  • McNay, Lois. Foucault and feminism: Power, gender and the self. John Wiley & Sons, 2013.
  • de Saint Laurent, Constance. Social Thinking and History: A Sociocultural Psychological Perspective on Representations of the Past. Taylor & Francis, 2021.
  • Srinivasan, Amia. The Right to Sex. Bloomsbury Publishing, 2021.
  • Vinsel, Lee, and Andrew L. Russell. The innovation delusion: How our obsession with the new has disrupted the work that matters most. Currency, 2020.

Papers and Chapters

  • Adam, Alison. “Deleting the subject: A feminist reading of epistemology in artificial intelligence.” Minds and Machines 10.2 (2000): 231-253.
  • Allhutter, Doris. “Of “Working Ontologists” and “High-quality Human Components”: The Politics of Semantic Infrastructures.” In digitalSTS. Princeton University Press, 2019. 326-348.
  • Bandy, Jack. “Problematic Machine Behavior: A Systematic Literature Review of Algorithm Audits.” Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 5.CSCW1 (2021): 1-34.
  • Banet-Weiser, Sarah. “‘Ruined’lives: Mediated white male victimhood.” European Journal of Cultural Studies 24.1 (2021): 60-80.
  • Beattie, Alex. “From Poacher to Protector of Attention: The Therapeutic Turn of Persuasive Technology and Ethics of a Smartphone Habit-breaking Application.” Science, Technology, & Human Values: 01622439211042667.
  • Bettcher, Talia Mae. “When selves have sex: What the phenomenology of trans sexuality can teach about sexual orientation.” Journal of Homosexuality 61.5 (2014): 605-620.
  • Bevernage, Berber. “The past is evil/evil is past: on retrospective politics, philosophy of history, and temporal manichaeism.” History and Theory 54.3 (2015): 333-352.
  • Bouzanis, Christoforos. “On the assumption of self-reflective subjectivity.” History of the Human Sciences (2021): 09526951211032895.
  • Bychowski, M. W., et al. ““Trans* historicities” A Roundtable Discussion.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 5.4 (2018): 658-685.
  • Cagle, Lauren E. “The ethics of researching unethical images: A story of trying to do good research without doing bad things.” Computers and Composition 61 (2021): 102651.
  • Carrigan, Coleen, Madison W. Green, and Abibat Rahman-Davies. ““The revolution will not be supervised”: Consent and open secrets in data science.” Big Data & Society 8.2 (2021): 20539517211035673.
  • Cascio, M. Ariel. ““Asperger’s syndrome does not exist”: the limits of brain-based identity discourses around Asperger’s syndrome and autism in Italy.” BioSocieties 16.2 (2021): 196-224.
  • Chan, Alan, et al. “The Limits of Global Inclusion in AI Development.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2102.01265 (2021).
  • Cheng, Myra, et al. “Social Norm Bias: Residual Harms of Fairness-Aware Algorithms.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2108.11056 (2021).
  • Chin-Yee, Benjamin, and Ross Upshur. “Three problems with big data and artificial intelligence in medicine.” Perspectives in biology and medicine 62.2 (2019): 237-256.
  • Crabtree, Andy. “Taking technomethodology seriously: hybrid change in the ethnomethodology–design relationship.” European Journal of Information Systems 13.3 (2004): 195-209.
  • Crompton, Catherine J., et al. “Neurotype-matching, but not being autistic, influences self and observer ratings of interpersonal rapport.” Frontiers in psychology 11 (2020): 2961.
  • Crompton, Catherine J., et al. “Autistic peer-to-peer information transfer is highly effective.” Autism 24.7 (2020): 1704-1712.
  • Cunningham, William A., Kristopher J. Preacher, and Mahzarin R. Banaji. “Implicit attitude measures: Consistency, stability, and convergent validity.” Psychological science 12.2 (2001): 163-170.
  • D’Alfonso, Simon. “AI in mental health.” Current Opinion in Psychology 36 (2020): 112-117.
  • David, Marie. “AI and the illusion of human-algorithm complementarity.” Social Research: An International Quarterly 86.4 (2019): 887-908.
  • DeVun, Leah, and Zeb Tortorici. “Trans, Time, and History.” Transgender Studies Quarterly 5.4 (2018): 518-539.
  • Dews, Peter. “The return of the subject in late Foucault.” Radical Philosophy 51.1 (1989): 37-41.
  • Diao, Enmao, Jie Ding, and Vahid Tarokh. “HeteroFL: Computation and Communication Efficient Federated Learning for Heterogeneous Clients.” International Conference on Learning Representations. 2020.
  • Dillon, Robin S. “Self-respect: Moral, emotional, political.” Ethics 107.2 (1997): 226-249.
  • Denoyer, Ludovic, and Patrick Gallinari. “The wikipedia xml corpus.” International Workshop of the Initiative for the Evaluation of XML Retrieval. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg, 2006.
  • Dryer, Theodora. “Algorithms under the Reign of Probability.” IEEE Annals of the History of Computing 40.1 (2018): 93-96.
  • Felder, Ryan Marshall. “Coming to Terms with the Black Box Problem: How to Justify AI Systems in Health Care.” Hastings Center Report (2021).
  • Fen, Sing-Nan. “Present and Re-Presentation a Discussion of Mead’s Philosophy of the Present.” The Philosophical Review 60.4 (1951): 545-550.
  • Gabriel, Iason. “Artificial intelligence, values, and alignment.” Minds and machines 30.3 (2020): 411-437.
  • Gill, Rosalind, and Akane Kanai. “Mediating neoliberal capitalism: Affect, subjectivity and inequality.” Journal of Communication 68.2 (2018): 318-326.
  • Gille, Felix, Anna Jobin, and Marcello Ienca. “What we talk about when we talk about trust: Theory of trust for AI in healthcare.” Intelligence-Based Medicine 1 (2020): 100001.
  • Grommé, Francisca, and Evelyn Ruppert. “Imagining Citizens as More than Data Subjects: A Methodography of a Collaborative Design Workshop on Co-producing Official Statistics.” Science and Technology Studies (2021).
  • Hayes, Jennie, et al. “‘Not at the diagnosis point’: Dealing with contradiction in autism assessment teams.” Social Science & Medicine 268 (2021): 113462.
  • Hazirbas, Caner, et al. “Casual Conversations: A Dataset for Measuring Fairness in AI.” Proceedings of the IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition. 2021.
  • Hird, Myra J. “Naturally queer.” Feminist Theory 5.1 (2004): 85-89.
  • Holmgren, Margaret R. “Forgiveness and the intrinsic value of persons.” American Philosophical Quarterly 30.4 (1993): 341-352.
  • Holmgren, Margaret R. “Self-forgiveness and responsible moral agency.” The Journal of Value Inquiry 32.1 (1998): 75-91.
  • Hong, Sun-ha. “Fuck Your Feelings.” In Affective Politics of Digital Media: Propaganda by Other Means (2020).
  • Houghton, Elizabeth. “Becoming a neoliberal subject.” Ephemera 19.3 (2019): 615-626.
  • Howard, John J., et al. “Reliability and Validity of Image-Based and Self-Reported Skin Phenotype Metrics.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2106.11240 (2021).
  • Jensen, Casper Bruun. “Say Why You Say It: On Ethnographic Companionship, Scale, and Effect.” Science & Technology Studies (2021).
  • Jones, Karen. “The politics of credibility.” In A Mind of One’s Own. Routledge, 2018. 154-176.
  • Jones, Matthew L. “How we became instrumentalists (again) data positivism since World War II.” Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences 48.5 (2018): 673-684.
  • Kockelman, Paul. “The anthropology of an equation: Sieves, spam filters, agentive algorithms, and ontologies of transformation.” HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory 3.3 (2013): 33-61.
  • Krishnapriya, K. S., Michael C. King, and Kevin W. Bowyer. “Analysis of Manual and Automated Skin Tone Assignments for Face Recognition Applications.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2104.14685 (2021).
  • Kristjánsson, Kristján. “Jealousy revisited: Recent philosophical work on a maligned emotion.” Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 19.3 (2016): 741-754.
  • Kuntz, Aaron M. ““Piercing This Wall”: Truth-Making in a Fascist World.” Qualitative Inquiry 27.5 (2021): 491-501.
  • Lane, Rhiannon. “Expanding boundaries in psychiatry: uncertainty in the context of diagnosis‐seeking and negotiation.” Sociology of health & illness 42 (2020): 69-83.
  • Lappé, Martine. “The maternal body as environment in autism science.” Social Studies of Science 46.5 (2016): 675-700.
  • Lebovitz, Sarah, Hila Lifshitz-Assaf, and Natalia Levina. “To incorporate or not to incorporate AI for critical judgments: The importance of ambiguity in professionals’ judgment process.” NYU Stern School of Business (2020).
  • Lim, Merlyna. “Algorithmic Enclaves ENCLAVES.” Affective Politics of Digital Media: Propaganda by Other Means (2020).
  • Longino, Helen E. “What’s Social About Social Epistemology?.” Journal of Social Philosophy: (2021).
  • Lumsden, David, and Joseph Ulatowski. “One Self Per Customer? From Disunified Agency to Disunified Self.” The Southern Journal of Philosophy 55.3 (2017): 314-335.
  • Lyons, Henrietta, Eduardo Velloso, and Tim Miller. “Conceptualising Contestability: Perspectives on Contesting Algorithmic Decisions.” Proceedings of the ACM on Human-Computer Interaction 5.CSCW1 (2021): 1-25.
  • Marjanovic, Olivera, Dubravka Cecez-Kecmanovic, and Richard Vidgen. “Algorithmic pollution: Making the invisible visible.” Journal of Information Technology (2021): 0268396221999671.
  • Mattsson, Matts, and Stephen Kemmis. “Praxis‐related research: serving two masters?.” Pedagogy, culture & society 15.2 (2007): 185-214.
  • May, Carl. “Retheorizing the clinical encounter: Normalization processes and the corporate ecologies of care.” New Directions in the Sociology of Chronic and Disabling Conditions. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2010. 129-145.
  • McDaniel, Stan V. “Continuity, Time, and “Artificial Intelligence”.” Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy 14.1 (2018): 105-112.
  • Nakassis, Constantine V. “Citation and citationality.” Signs and Society 1.1 (2013): 51-77.
  • Olson, Eric T., and Karsten Witt. “Narrative and persistence.” Canadian Journal of Philosophy 49.3 (2019): 419-434.
  • Pickersgill, Martyn. “Ordering disorder: Knowledge production and uncertainty in neuroscience research.” Science as Culture 20.1 (2011): 71-87.
  • Pickersgill, Martyn. “The social life of the brain: Neuroscience in society.” Current Sociology 61.3 (2013): 322-340.
  • Pickersgill, Martyn. “Uncertainty work as ontological negotiation: adjudicating access to therapy in clinical psychology.” Sociology of Health & Illness 42 (2020): 84-98.
  • Plájás, Ildikó Zonga. “Permanent Temporality: Race, Time, and the Materiality of Romanian Identity Cards.” Science, Technology, & Human Values (2021): 01622439211043200.
  • Postill, John. “Populism and social media: A global perspective.” Media, Culture & Society 40.5 (2018): 754-765.
  • Rasmussen, Erik Børve. “Rhetorical work and medical authority: Constructing convincing cases in insurance medicine.” Social Science & Medicine 264 (2020): 113324.
  • Reigeluth, Tyler Butler. “Why data is not enough: Digital traces as control of self and self-control.” Surveillance & Societys 12.2 (2014): 243-254.
  • Rockhill, Gabriel. “Foucault, Genealogy, Counter-History.” Theory & Event 23.1 (2020): 85-119.
  • Roskies, Adina L. “Neuroimaging and inferential distance.” Neuroethics 1.1 (2008): 19-30.
  • Saar, Martin. “Understanding genealogy: History, power, and the self.” Journal of the Philosophy of History 2.3 (2008): 295-314.
  • Sambasivan, Nithya, et al. “Non-portability of Algorithmic Fairness in India.” arXiv preprint arXiv:2012.03659 (2020).
  • Sanders, Chris. “Examining public health nurses’ documentary practices: The impact of criminalizing HIV non-disclosure on inscription styles.” Critical Public Healths 25.4 (2015): 398-409.
  • Sattler, Felix, Klaus-Robert Müller, and Wojciech Samek. “Clustered federated learning: Model-agnostic distributed multitask optimization under privacy constraints.” IEEE transactions on neural networks and learning systems (2020).
  • Scheman, Naomi. “Though this be method, yet there is madness in it: Paranoia and liberal epistemology”. Routledge, 2018.
  • Seberger, John S. “Into the archive of ubiquitous computing: the data perfect tense and the historicization of the present”. Journal of Documentation, 2021.
  • Sherron, Catherine. “Constructing common sense.” Women, Work and Computerization. Springer, Boston, MA, 2000. 111-118.
  • Singh, Ilina. “Brain talk: power and negotiation in children’s discourse about self, brain and behaviour.” Sociology of health & illness 35.6 (2013): 813-827.
  • Staunæs, Dorthe. “Where have all the subjects gone? Bringing together the concepts of intersectionality and subjectification.” NORA: Nordic journal of women’s studies 11.2 (2003): 101-110.
  • Stevens, Marthe, Rik Wehrens, and Antoinette de Bont. “Epistemic virtues and data-driven dreams: On sameness and difference in the epistemic cultures of data science and psychiatry.” Social Science & Medicine 258 (2020): 113116.
  • Sweet, Paige L., and Claire Laurier Decoteau. “Contesting normal: The DSM-5 and psychiatric subjectivation.” BioSocieties 13.1 (2018): 103-122.
  • Tabb, Kathryn. “Psychiatric progress and the assumption of diagnostic discrimination.” Philosophy of Science 82.5 (2015): 1047-1058.
  • Thieme, Anja, Danielle Belgrave, and Gavin Doherty. “Machine learning in mental health: A systematic review of the HCI literature to support the development of effective and implementable ML systems.” ACM Transactions on Computer-Human Interaction (TOCHI) 27.5 (2020): 1-53.
  • Thomas, Carol. “Medical sociology and disability theory.” New directions in the sociology of chronic and disabling conditions. Palgrave Macmillan, London, 2010. 37-56.
  • Vale, Mira D., and Mary-Jo DelVecchio Good. “Transcending the profession: psychiatric patients’ experiences of trust in clinicians.” Journal of health and social behavior 61.2 (2020): 208-222.
  • Vincent, Alana. “Speakers for the Dead: Digital Memory and the Construction of Identity.” The Ethos of History: Time and Responsibility (2018): 175-191.
  • Ware, Olivia R., et al. “Racial limitations of fitzpatrick skin type.” Cutis 105.2 (2020): 77-80.
  • Weinberg, Shelley. “Locke on personal identity.” Philosophy Compass 6.6 (2011): 398-407.
  • Welpinghus, Anna. “Jealousy: a response to infidelity? On the nature and appropriateness conditions of jealousy.” Philosophical Explorations 20.3 (2017): 322-337.
  • Wieseler, Christine. “Objectivity as neutrality, nondisabled ignorance, and strong objectivity in biomedical ethics.” Social Philosophy Today (2016).
  • Wieseler, Christine. “Epistemic oppression and ableism in bioethics.” Hypatia 35.4 (2020): 714-732.