Intersections of Feminist Technoscience and Phenomenology: Subjectivity, Embodiment, Agency brings together feminist phenomenology and feminist technoscience studies with the aim of gaining a more comprehensive understanding of subjectivity and subjectivities as embodied and situated in the world.
The book demonstrates how combining insights from both of these traditions can deepen feminist analyses of pressing contemporary issues, from climate change to medical technologies, while contributing to broader discussions in feminist theory, epistemology, and subjectivity studies. The volume is organized into three interconnected parts examining situated subjectivity and knowledge production, embodiment and normative body formation, and the relationship between affectivity and agency.
Intersections of Feminist Technoscience and Phenomenology is an essential resource for both undergraduates and postgraduates studying Gender Studies, Philosophy, Science and Technology Studies, Environmental and Medical Humanities, and Bioethics.
Edited by:
Lisa Folkmarson Käll,
Kristin Zeiler (Linköping University,
Sweden)
Imprint: Routledge
Country of Publication: United Kingdom
Dimensions:
Height: 234mm,
Width: 156mm,
Weight: 453g
ISBN: 9781041007241
ISBN 10: 1041007248
Pages: 330
Publication Date: 28 November 2025
Audience:
College/higher education
,
Primary
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Forthcoming
1. Thinking at Intersections in Feminist Theory 2. In Conversation: Feminist Phenomenology and Feminist Technoscience Studies Part 1: Situated Subjectivity and Knowledge Production 3. Situated Subjectivity and Knowledge Production across Feminist Phenomenology and Feminist Technoscience Studies 4. Germinating the Seeds of Elemental Sol(id)arity: Sensory Engagements, Apparatuses, and Generative Blind Fields in Everyday Solar Encounters 5. Entangling Responsiveness: Diffracting Barad, Bohr, and Merleau-Ponty 6. Curating Embodied Resistance through Social Media: The Role of Virtual Audiences in the Fight for Social Justice Part 2: The Body, Embodiment and Technology 7. Bodies and Embodiment Across Feminist Phenomenology and Feminist Technoscience Studies 8. Pregnant Embodiment During Extreme Bushfires: Breathing in Climate Crisis 9. Achieving a Fit Between Bodies and Prosthesis: Accounting for Experiences with Limb Prostheses at the Crossroads Between Feminist Technoscience Studies and Phenomenology 10. Normative Technology and the Body: The 4N Approach to Technology 11. Aging Bodies, Bio-Power, and the Role of Critical Phenomenology Part 3: Affectivity and Agency 12. Affectivity and Agency across Feminist Phenomenology and Feminist Technoscience Studies 13. On Simulation and Stimulation: Doctor-Centered and Patient-Centered Practices of Care in Pedro Almodóvar’s “Brain-Dead Trilogy” 14. Between Molar, Molecular and Spectral Mourning: A Conversation Between Phenomenology and Feminist New Materialism
Lisa Folkmarson Käll is Professor of Gender Studies at Stockholm University, Sweden. Kristin Zeiler is Professor at the Department of Thematic Studies: Technology and Social Change, and Director of the Centre for Medical Humanities and Bioethics, Linköping University, Sweden.
Reviews for Intersections of Feminist Technoscience and Phenomenology: Subjectivity, Embodiment, Agency
“A valuable and long overdue conversation demonstrating the theoretical insights afforded by engaging both feminist phenomenology and feminist technoscience studies to explore our ways of being in and with the world. "" - Ericka Johnson, Professor of Gender and Society, Linköping University, Sweden “This very timely and essential collection sets out the case not just for bringing the two areas of inquiry – feminist technoscience studies and critical phenomenology - into dialogue but for exposing their deep interdependence. Zeiler and Kӓll once again offer a rich resource that will be as engaging to postconventional philosophers as to those embracing highly empirical studies. With their scholarly but sensitive introductions to the contributions of each section, they skillfully guide the reader through three major areas – subjectivities, embodiment and affectivity – of lived experience to emphasise the need for an inherently interdisciplinary reading.” - Margrit Shildrick, Guest Professor of Gender and Knowledge Production, Stockholm University, Sweden “In bringing together feminist theorising about embodied subjectivity through phenomenology, with critical perspectives about how bodies are situated within, and shaped by, material and discursive forces, this volume offers a range of engaging and provocative chapters that forge new theoretical ground in feminist scholarship. Considering the experience and formation of subjectivity within diverse topics, such as technology, pregnancy, prostheses, ageing and death, the essays in this book provide fascinating reflections about what it means to be a situated, relational, feeling and embodied subject in a world shaped by power, technology and artefacts. This volume will become essential reading in both feminist STS and feminist phenomenology, enriching theoretical methodologies in a range of debates and disciplinary approaches.” - Luna Dolezal, Professor of Philosophy and Medical Humanities, University of Exeter, UK