All Stories

  1. ‘Better understanding about what's going on’: young Australians’ use of digital technologies for health and fitness
  2. Food of the Future? Consumer Responses to the Idea of 3D-Printed Meat and Insect-Based Foods
  3. How do data come to matter? Living and becoming with personal data
  4. Feeling your data: Touch and making sense of personal digital data
  5. Future of Food in the Digital Realm
  6. Quantified Data & Social Relationships
  7. “For Me, the Biggest Benefit Is Being Ahead of the Game”:The Use of Social Media in Health Work
  8. The datafied child: The dataveillance of children and implications for their rights
  9. How does health feel? Towards research on the affective atmospheres of digital health
  10. Digital health now and in the future: Findings from a participatory design stakeholder workshop
  11. Editorial: Towards sensory studies of digital health
  12. Digital companion species and eating data: Implications for theorising digital data–human assemblages
  13. Towards critical digital health studies: Reflections on two decades of research in health and the way forward
  14. Critical Perspectives on Digital Health Technologies
  15. Apps as Artefacts: Towards a Critical Perspective on Mobile Health and Medical Apps
  16. Data assemblages, sentient schools and digitised health and physical education (response to Gard)
  17. Quantified sex: a critical analysis of sexual and reproductive self-tracking using apps
  18. Risk
  19. The pedagogy of disgust: the ethical, moral and political implications of using disgust in public health campaigns
  20. “How do you Measure up?” Assumptions About “Obesity” and Health-Related Behaviors and Beliefs in two Australian “Obesity” Prevention Campaigns
  21. Digital Risk Society
  22. Self-Tracking Modes: Reflexive Self-Monitoring and Data Practices
  23. Fabricated Data Bodies: Reflections on 3D Printed Digital Body Objects in Medical and Health Domains
  24. Quantifying the body: monitoring and measuring health in the age of mHealth technologies
  25. Risk and emotion: towards an alternative theoretical perspective
  26. The Sociology of Medical Screening: Critical Perspectives, New Directions . Edited by Natalie Armstrong and Helen Eborall. Chichster: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012. Pp. vi+154. $39.95 (paper).
  27. Digital methods
  28. ‘It’s a terrible thing when your children are sick’: Motherhood and home healthcare work
  29. ‘IT'S A TERRIBLE THING WHEN YOUR CHILDREN ARE SICK’: MOTHERHOOD AND HOME HEALTHCARE WORK
  30. The digitally engaged patient: Self-monitoring and self-care in the digital health era
  31. Twitter: social communication in the digital age
  32. Precious, Pure, Uncivilised, Vulnerable: Infant Embodiment in Australian Popular Media
  33. The Social Worlds of the Unborn
  34. Fat Politics: Collected Writings
  35. Understanding the Human Machine [Commentary]
  36. Splitting bodies/selves: women’s concepts of embodiment at the moment of birth
  37. ‘Precious cargo’: foetal subjects, risk and reproductive citizenship
  38. M-health and health promotion: The digital cyborg and surveillance society
  39. Medicine as Culture: Illness, Disease and the Body
  40. Configuring Maternal, Preborn and Infant Embodiment
  41. Digital Sociology: An Introduction
  42. 'I'm Always on the Lookout for What Could Be Going Wrong': Mothers' Concepts and Experiences of Health and Illness in Their Young Children
  43. ‘The best thing for the baby’: Mothers’ concepts and experiences related to promoting their infants’ health and development
  44. Consumerism in the health care setting: an exploratory study of factors underlying the selection and evaluation of primary medical services
  45. Risk and Everyday Life
  46. Lay discourses and beliefs related to food risks: an Australian perspective
  47. ‘A grim health future’: food risks in the Sydney press
  48. Holding the line online: exploring wired relationships for people with disabilities
  49. 'Life would be pretty dull without risk': Voluntary risk-taking and its pleasures
  50. “The right way of doing it all”: First-time Australian mothers' decisions about paid employment
  51. ‘They’ve forgotten that I’m the mum’: constructing and practising motherhood in special care nurseries
  52. Blurring the boundaries: breastfeeding and maternal subjectivity
  53. The externality of the inside: body images of pregnancy
  54. Risk Revisited, Pat Caplan (ed.), London: Pluto Press, 2000, £45.00 (£14.99 pbk), vi+258 pp. (ISBN: 0-7453-1463-5)
  55. Medicine and Health Care in Australia
  56. Border Crossings: Narratives of Movement, 'Home' and Risk
  57. Technology, selfhood and physical disability
  58. The Social Construction of Medicine and the Body
  59. The heart of the meal: food preferences and habits among rural Australian couples
  60. Introduction: risk and sociocultural theory
  61. Risk and the ontology of pregnant embodiment
  62. Risk and Sociocultural Theory
  63. Risk, calculable and incalculable
  64. ‘Developing the “whole me”’: Citizenship, neo-liberalism and the contemporary health and physical education curriculum
  65. The Emotional Self: A Sociocultural Exploration
  66. Theorizing fear of crime: beyond the rational/irrational opposition
  67. Theorizing fear of crime: beyond the rational/irrational opposition
  68. The experiences of new fatherhood: a socio‐cultural analysis
  69. Archetypes of Infection: People with HIV/AIDS in the Australian Press in the Mid 1990s
  70. Constructing Fatherhood: Discourses and Experiences
  71. Consuming Work: Computers, Subjectivity and Appropriation in the University Workplace
  72. Psychoanalytic Sociology and the Medical Encounter: A Reply to Pilgrim
  73. Representing doctors: discourses and images in the Australian press
  74. The end of AIDS?: AIDS reporting in the Australian press in the mid-1990s
  75. Fear of Crime: Volume 2
  76. Fear of Crime: Volume 1
  77. A postmodern public health?
  78. Psychoanalytic sociology and the medical encounter: Parsons and beyond
  79. Psychoanalytic sociology and the medical encounter: Parsons and beyond.
  80. Psychoanalytic Sociology and the Medical Encounter: Parsons and Beyond
  81. Doctors on the medical profession
  82. Doctors on the medical profession.
  83. Doctors on the Medical Profession
  84. Consumerism, reflexivity and the medical encounter
  85. Senior school students' experiences and opinions of school-based HIV-AIDS education
  86. Book Reviews
  87. Epidemiology as a sociocultural practice
  88. Infinitesimal risk as public health crisis: News media coverage of a doctor-patient HIV contact tracing investigation
  89. ‘All Red in the Face’: Students' Views on School-Based HIV/AIDS and Sexuality Education
  90. Discourses and practices related to suntanning and solar protection among young Australians
  91. The Embodied Computer/User
  92. Medical and health stories on the Sydney Morning Herald's front page
  93. EXHIBITION REVIEW
  94. Perspectives on power, communication and the medical encounter: implications for nursing theory and practice
  95. ‘A healthy lifestyle might be the death of you’: discourses on diet, cholesterol control and heart disease in the press and among the lay public
  96. ‘Doing the right thing’: The symbolic meanings and experiences of having an HIV antibody test
  97. D&S Forum
  98. ‘Panic bodies’: discourses on risk and HIV antibody testing
  99. Food, Memory and Meaning: The Symbolic and Social Nature of Food Events
  100. Panic computing: The viral metaphor and computer technology
  101. Consumerism, commodity culture and health promotion
  102. Toward the Development of Critical Health Communication Praxis
  103. Femininity, Responsibility, and the Technological Imperative: Discourses on Breast Cancer in the Australian Press
  104. Is there life after Foucault? Poststructuralism and the health social sciences
  105. The Construction of Patienthood in Medical Advertising
  106. Risk as Moral Danger: The Social and Political Functions of Risk Discourse in Public Health
  107. Choosing alternative therapy: an exploratory study of sociodemographic characteristics and motives of patients resident in Sydney
  108. Back to Bedlam? Chelmsford and the Press
  109. Discourse analysis: a new methodology for understanding the ideologies of health and illness
  110. From complacency to panic: AIDS and heterosexuals in the Australian press, July 1986 to June 1988
  111. Primary Health Care Consumerism amongst Elderly Australians
  112. Caveat emptor or blissful ignorance? Patients and the consumerist ethos
  113. Senior school students' experiences and opinions of school–based HIV–AIDS education
  114. Unborn Assemblages