ABSTRACT

The Gender of Things is a highly interdisciplinary book that explores the power relationship between gender and the material culture of technoscience, addressing a seemingly straightforward question: How does a thing—such as a spacesuit, a humanoid robot, or a surgical instrument—become a gendered object?

These 14 short chapters cover an original selection of “things”: from cosmeceuticals to early motor scooters, from Scrum boards to border walls, and from robots to the human body and its parts. By historically examining how significance has been attached to specific things and how things were designed and produced, the chapters reveal how the concept of gender has been embedded and finds expression in the material world of science and technology. With insights from science and technology studies (STS), anthropology, the history of ergonomics, museum studies, the history of science, technology, and medicine but also the philosophy and sociology of technology and feminist new materialism, this collection reminds us that our material creations not only bear knowledge about our world.

The Gender of Things will be of key interest to undergraduate and graduate students and research scholars of STS as well as gender studies.

The Intorduction and Chapter 4 of this book are freely available as downloadable Open Access PDFs at https://www.taylorfrancis.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Gendering Things

part 1|87 pages

Things in/as Laboratories

chapter 1|15 pages

Sealing Wax and String

chapter 2|14 pages

Butter

Fat Lions and Dairy Girls

chapter 4|18 pages

Godofredo and Françoise Travel around the World

Phantoms, Radioiodine Uptake Tests, and the IAEA's Standardization Projects

chapter 5|11 pages

The Tell-Tale Heart

Multiple Ontologies of the First Human Donor Heart

chapter 6|13 pages

Colourful Minilabs

Cosmeceuticals at the Interface of Gender, Technology, and Knowledge Transfers

part 2|74 pages

Things as Artefacts

chapter 7|14 pages

Gendered Mobility

Early Motor Scooting around 1920

chapter 9|13 pages

The Fan

Gendered Bodily Communication at the Intersection of Salon Semiotics, Fashion, Political Campaigning, and Menopause Relief

chapter 10|15 pages

Gendering the Boundary Object

“Sophia the Robot” as Cyborg-Woman, Fashionista, Citizen, and Imagination

chapter 11|16 pages

Animating Machines, Alienating Women

Siri and Alexa as Affective Linguistic Labourers

part 3|42 pages

Things as Sites of Power

chapter 12|13 pages

Dangerous Erections

Gender, Race, and the Engineering of Trump's Border Wall

chapter 13|15 pages

Paternity and Pedigree

How Academic Genealogical Databases Become Gendered