All Stories

  1. Using a category to accomplish resistance in the context of an emergency call
  2. Physiotherapy for vegetative and minimally conscious state patients: family perceptions and experiences
  3. Law in everyday life and death: a socio-legal study of chronic disorders of consciousness
  4. I. Feminism and the ‘right to die’: Editorial introduction to the Special Feature
  5. Anonymising interview data: challenges and compromise in practice
  6. A diagnostic illusory? The case of distinguishing between “vegetative” and “minimally conscious” states
  7. Interpreting chronic disorders of consciousness: medical science and family experience
  8. Grief, anger and despair in relatives of severely brain injured patients: responding without pathologising
  9. Death, treatment decisions and the permanent vegetative state: evidence from families and experts
  10. Withdrawing artificial nutrition and hydration from minimally conscious and vegetative patients: family perspectives
  11. Reformulating place
  12. Word Selection and Social Identities in Talk-in-Interaction
  13. Representing Our Own Experience
  14. The ‘window of opportunity’ for death after severe brain injury: family experiences
  15. Conversation Analysis and Gender and Sexuality
  16. Análise da Conversa Feminista e Análise da Conversa Aplicada
  17. Repair
  18. Compliments on a Home Birth Helpline
  19. Research at the Intersection of Reference and Repair: Introduction to the Special Issue
  20. Referring to Persons Without Using a Full-Form Reference: Locally Initial Indexicals in Action
  21. What about advance directives?
  22. Doing Gender
  23. Developing Feminist Conversation Analysis: A Response to Wowk
  24. Using Conversation Analysis in Feminist and Critical Research
  25. Introduction: person-reference in conversation analytic research
  26. Some uses of third-person reference forms in speaker self-reference
  27. Extraction and aggregation in the repair of individual and collective self-reference
  28. Emotional Labour in Action: Navigating Multiple Involvements in the Beauty Salon
  29. Birth trauma: talking with women and the value of conversation analysis
  30. Feminist Conversation Analysis
  31. III. Contesting Same-Sex Marriage in Talk-in-Interaction
  32. VI. Becoming a `Bloke'
  33. II. Emotional Labour in the Beauty Salon
  34. Is 'woman' always relevantly gendered?
  35. Surprise As an Interactional Achievement: Reaction Tokens in Conversation
  36. After post-cognitivism
  37. Calls to a home birth helpline: Empowerment in childbirth
  38. Heteronormativity in Action: Reproducing the Heterosexual Nuclear Family in After-hours Medical Calls
  39. The de-gaying and re-gaying of AIDS: contested homophobias in lesbian and gay awareness training
  40. Extracts from The Social Construction of Lesbianism
  41. Afterword: Reflections on Three Decades of Lesbian and Gay Psychology
  42. The Re-Branding of Marriage: Why We Got Married Instead of Registering a Civil Partnership
  43. Intersex and Identity: The Contested Self . By Sharon E.  Preves. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 2003. Pp. xiii+213. $60.00 (cloth); $22.00 (paper).
  44. ‘The thief of womanhood’: women's experience of polycystic ovarian syndrome
  45. Support for Lesbian and Gay Human Rights Scale
  46. Telling it straight? Dictionary definitions of women's genitals
  47. Reformulating Sexual Script Theory
  48. The perfectible vagina: Size matters
  49. Doing Feminist Conversation Analysis
  50. How to Resist an Idiom
  51. Thinking differently about thinking positive: a discursive approach to cancer patients’ talk
  52. Heterosexism.
  53. Heterosexuality.
  54. Intersexuality: Deconstructing the Sex/Gender Binary
  55. Feminist psychology in an Interdisciplinary Context
  56. `Emotion Work' as a Participant Resource: A Feminist Analysis of Young Women's Talk-in-Interaction
  57. D&S Forum
  58. D&S Forum
  59. Feminism and discourse: Psychological perspectives. Sue Wilkinson and Celia Kitzinger (Eds.). London: Sage, 1995. Pp. 193.
  60. Validating Women's Experience? Dilemmas in Feminist Research
  61. `The Freudian Coverup': A Reappraisal
  62. Engendering Infidelity: Essentialist and Social Constructionist Readings of a Story Completion Task
  63. Over Our Dead Bodies: The Scientific Construction of Gay Biology
  64. Social Constructionism: Implications for Lesbian and Gay Psychology
  65. Transitions from heterosexuality to lesbianism: The discursive production of lesbian identities.
  66. Should Psychologists Study Sex Differences?
  67. Reviews
  68. The social construction of heterosexuality
  69. VIRGINS AND QUEERS
  70. X. Listening to a Different Voice
  71. Re-Viewing Heterosexuality
  72. Wilkinson, Sue, and Kitzinger, Celia (eds.),Heterosexuality; A Feminism and Psychology Reader
  73. Depoliticising the personal
  74. `Psychology Constructs the Female': A Reappraisal
  75. Whose breast is it anyway?
  76. Lesbian psychology in Britain: Back into the closet?
  77. Theorizing Heterosexuality
  78. III The `Real' Lesbian Feminist Therapist: Who is She?
  79. IV Lesbian Psychology in Britain: Back into the Closet?
  80. Lesbian Psychology, Lesbian Politics
  81. Politicizing Psychology
  82. A Q-methodological study of lesbian identities
  83. ‘This In-Between’
  84. Feminist Approaches
  85. Talking Sex and Gender
  86. Conversation Analysis
  87. Categories in talk-in-interaction: Gendering speaker and recipient
  88. Speaking of Oppression: Psychology, Politics, and the Language of Power
  89. Closet Talk: The Contemporary Relevance of the Closet in Lesbian and Gay Interaction