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Defacement: Public Secrecy and the Labor of the Negative

Stanford University Press (1999)

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  1. Transparency in search of a theory.Mark Fenster - 2015 - European Journal of Social Theory 18 (2):150-167.
    Transparency’s importance as an administrative norm seems self-evident. Prevailing ideals of political theory stipulate that the more visible government is, the more democratic, accountable, and legitimate it appears. The disclosure of state information consistently disappoints, however: there is never enough of it, while it often seems not to produce a truer democracy, a more accountable state, better policies, and a more contented populace. This gap between theory and practice suggests that the theoretical assumptions that provide the basis for transparency are (...)
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  • Secrets and democracy: From arcana imperii to Wikileaks.Owen D. Thomas - 2018 - Contemporary Political Theory 17 (S2):82-85.
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  • Profitable failure: antidepressant drugs and the triumph of flawed experiments.Linsey McGoey - 2010 - History of the Human Sciences 23 (1):58-78.
    Drawing on an analysis of Irving Kirsch and colleagues’ controversial 2008 article in PLoS [Public Library of Science] Medicine on the efficacy of SSRI antidepressant drugs such as Prozac, I examine flaws within the methodologies of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that have made it difficult for regulators, clinicians and patients to determine the therapeutic value of this class of drug. I then argue, drawing analogies to work by Pierre Bourdieu and Michael Power, that it is the very limitations of RCTs (...)
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  • We Have Never Been Secular: Religious Identities, Duties, and Ethics in Audit Practice.Jeff Everett, Constance Friesen, Dean Neu & Abu Shiraz Rahaman - 2018 - Journal of Business Ethics 153 (4):1121-1142.
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  • (1 other version)Introduction: Blood Donation, Bioeconomy, Culture.Jacob Copeman - 2009 - Body and Society 15 (2):1-28.
    This article explores nationalist interpretations of blood donation activity, examining how some Indians read integrative messages into the practical procedures through which blood is donated and distributed. The first post-Independence Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru, proclaimed the need for `national integration' as a bulwark against a myriad of linguistic, caste and ethnic agitations that threatened to disrupt the unity of the newly formed nation-state. This article shows that a striking manifestation of the Nehruvian ideology of national integration possesses a (...)
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  • Animal research unbound: The messiness of the moral and the ethnographer’s dilemma.Lesley A. Sharp - 2021 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 43 (2):1-19.
    Interspecies intimacy defines an inescapable reality of lab animal research. This essay is an effort to disentangle this reality’s consequences—both in and outside the lab—as framed by the quandaries of ethnographic engagement. Encounters with lab staff and, in turn, with audiences unfamiliar with laboratory life, together provide crucial entry points for considering how the “messiness of the moral” might facilitate an “unbounded” approach to lab animal worlds. Within the lab, one encounters specialized ethical principles—often codified as law—that delimit strict boundaries (...)
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  • Love at Last Sight: Port Arthur and the Afterlife of Trauma.Maria Tumarkin - 2004 - Cultural Studies Review 10 (2):13-32.
    We all know so many words by now—genocide, death, slaughter, horror, unthinkable loss, limits of human depravity... For all their unsettling qualities, their ability to wound and provoke, these words are deeply familiar, part of the language we have come to speak. Yet in the world of material objects and sites marked by violence and loss, there exist things and places, which, as Kyo Maclear once wrote, ‘have irretrievable counterparts in those experiences for which no records whatsoever exist, those losses (...)
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  • Visible Violence in Kiki Smith's Life Wants to Live.Lisa Coulthard - 2004 - Journal of Medical Humanities 25 (1):21-32.
    Recent theoretical analyses of domestic violence have posited the complicity of medical communities in erasing and obfuscating the cause of injuries. Although medical cultures have engaged in progressive initiatives to address and treat domestic violence, these medical and clinical models can render domestic violence invisible by framing the battered woman as evidentiary object. By analyzing this invisibility of domestic violence through the concept of public secrecy, in this article I consider Kiki Smith's 1982 installation piece Life Wants to Live. Using (...)
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  • Open secrets: The affective cultures of organizing on Mexico’s northern border.Rosemary Hennessy - 2009 - Feminist Theory 10 (3):309-322.
    Taking sexuality and affect as its focus, this article leads us into the uncharted terrain of ‘outlawed affects’, those unspeakable sensations that do not fall easily into established categories and yet meddle with social relations. They are in this sense ‘open secrets’. The article explores some of the challenges for feminist methodology in representing the space where affective and other needs meet in the context of the cultures of labour organizing in the factory communities on Mexico’s northern border.
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