This contribution first describes early, largely progressive influences on STS and myself, sketching diverse groups concerned with sciences, technologies and especially medicines. I then turn to my own early activist concerns and their later scholarly and other manifestations, situating my feminist women’s health activism and development as an early transdisciplinary STS scholar increasingly nourished transnationally. Last, I reflect on where I now stand, with feminist and other STS colleagues, and what we face at this point in the twenty-first century – some anguished yet hopeful intersections of history and autobiography.
...MoreArticle Peter J. Taylor; Karin Patzke (2021) From Radical Science to STS. Science as Culture (pp. 1-10).
Book
Arne Kaijser;
Markku Lehtonen;
Jan-Henrik Meyer;
Mar Rubio-Varas;
(2021)
Engaging the Atom: The History of Nuclear Energy and Society in Europe from the 1950s to the Present
(/isis/citation/CBB782335181/)
Book
Hannah Dudley-Shotwell;
(2020)
Revolutionizing Women's Healthcare: The Feminist Self-Help Movement in America
(/isis/citation/CBB446855800/)
Article
Brian Martin;
(2021)
Reflections on a Life in Science and STS
(/isis/citation/CBB616226677/)
Article
Kelly Moore;
(2021)
Capitalisms, Generative Projects and the New STS
(/isis/citation/CBB341784553/)
Book
Sebastian Vehlken;
(2019)
Zootechnologies: A Media History of Swarm Research
(/isis/citation/CBB504746255/)
Book
Henri F. Ellenberger;
Emmanuel Delille;
(2020)
Ethnopsychiatry
(/isis/citation/CBB911788901/)
Book
Prescott, Heather Munro;
(2011)
The Morning After: A History of Emergency Contraception in the United States
(/isis/citation/CBB001212465/)
Article
Kelly O'Donnell;
(2019)
Our Doctors, Ourselves: Barbara Seaman and Popular Health Feminism in the 1970s
(/isis/citation/CBB559683319/)
Article
Conis, Elena;
(2013)
A Mother's Responsibility: Women, Medicine, and the Rise of Contemporary Vaccine Skepticism in the United States
(/isis/citation/CBB001213524/)
Article
Houck, Judith A.;
(2003)
“What Do These Women Want?” Feminist Responses to Feminine Forever, 1963--1980
(/isis/citation/CBB000630194/)
Book
Kline, Wendy;
(2010)
Bodies of Knowledge: Sexuality, Reproduction, and Women's Health in the Second Wave
(/isis/citation/CBB001023179/)
Article
Kline, Wendy;
(2005)
“Please Include This in Your Book”: Readers Respond to Our Bodies, Ourselves
(/isis/citation/CBB000630054/)
Article
John Krige;
Sabina Leonelli;
(2021)
Mobilizing the Transnational History of Knowledge Flows. COVID-19 and the Politics of Research at the Borders
(/isis/citation/CBB670644303/)
Article
Ernst van der Wal;
(December 2020)
LGBT Refugees and the Visual Representation of Transnational Mobility
(/isis/citation/CBB121039241/)
Book
Amit Prasad;
(2014)
Imperial Technoscience: Transnational Histories of MRI in the United States, Britain, and India
(/isis/citation/CBB431842036/)
Article
Marianne de Laet;
Annelieke Driessen;
Else Vogel;
(December 2021)
Thinking with attachments: Appreciating a generative analytic
(/isis/citation/CBB485499768/)
Article
Amanda Menking;
Jon Rosenberg;
(May 2021)
WP:NOT, WP:NPOV, and Other Stories Wikipedia Tells Us: A Feminist Critique of Wikipedia’s Epistemology
(/isis/citation/CBB986509779/)
Article
Madeleine Pape;
(June 2021)
Co-production, multiplied: Enactments of sex as a biological variable in US biomedicine
(/isis/citation/CBB034212602/)
Article
Gabriela Elisa Sued;
(2018)
Literature Review: The cyborg metaphor in Ibero-American science, technology and gender literature
(/isis/citation/CBB218775215/)
Book
Ioana Cîrstocea;
(2019)
La fin de la femme rouge?: fabriques transnationales du genre après la chute du Mur
(/isis/citation/CBB169534025/)
Be the first to comment!