AtkinsonP., (1995), Medical Talk and Medical Work: The Liturgy of the Clinic, London: Sage.
2.
BensonD. and HughesJ.A., (1991), Method: evidence and inference – evidence and inference for ethnomethodology, in ButtonG. (ed.), Ethnomethodology and the Human Sciences, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
3.
BergM., (1997), Rationalising Medical Work: Decision-Support Techniques and Medical Practices, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
4.
BergM., (1998), Order(s) and Disorder(s): of protocols and medical practices, in BergM. M. and MolA. (eds), Differences in Medicine: Unravelling Practices, Techniques, and Bodies, Durham NC: Duke University Press.
5.
BourdieuP., (1977), Outline of a Theory of Practice (translated by NiceR.), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
6.
ButlerJ., (1993), Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of “Sex”, London: Routledge.
7.
CallonM., (1986), Some Elements of a Sociology of Translation: Domestication of the Scallops and the Fishermen of St Brieuc Bay, in LawJ. (ed.), Power, Action and Belief: A New Sociology of Knowledge, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.
8.
ChatterjeeM.T.MoonJ.C.MurphyR. and McCreaD., (2005), The ‘OBS’ chart: an evidence based approach to re-design of the patient observation chart in a district general hospital setting, Postgraduate Medical Journal81: 663–666.
9.
DerridaJ., (1972 [1984]), Difference, in Margins of Philosophy (translated by BassA.), Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
10.
DerridaJ., (1976 [1967]), Of Grammatology (translated by SpivakG. C.), Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press.
11.
DerridaJ., (2006 [1993]), Specters of Marx: the State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning, and the New International (translated KamufP.), London: Routledge Classics.
12.
DouglasM. and IsherwoodB., (1996/1979), The World of Goods: Towards an Anthropology of Consumption, London: Routledge.
13.
FalkP., (1994), The Consuming Body, London: Sage.
14.
FoucaultM., (2002 [1972]), The Archaeology of Knowledge, London: Routledge.
15.
FoucaultM., (1989 [1973]), The Birth of the Clinic: An Archaeology of Medical Perception, London: Routledge.
16.
FrankA., (2001 [1991]), At the Will of the Body: Reflections on Illness, New York: Houghton Mifflin.
17.
GarfinkelH., (1967), Studies in Ethnomethodology, Cambridge: Polity.
18.
GoffmanE., (1959 [1990]), The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life, Harmondsworth: Penguin.
19.
GoffmanE., (1961 [1991]), Asylums: Essays on the Social Situation of Mental Patients and Other Inmates, Harmondsworth: Penguin.
20.
GoffmanE., (1986 [1963]), Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity, New York: Simon & Schuster.
21.
GoffmanE., (1966), Behavior in Public Places, New York: Free Press.
22.
GouldnerA., (1971), The Coming Crisis of Western Sociology, London: Heinemann.
23.
HappM.B., (2000), Interpretation of nonvocal behavior and the meaning of voicelessness in critical care, Social Science and Medicine50: 1247–1255.
24.
HarawayD., (1991), Simians, Cyborgs and Women: The Reinvention of Nature, London: Free Association Books.
25.
HeathC. and LuffP., (2000), Documents and Professional Practice: ‘bad’ organizational reasons for ‘good’ clinical records, in HeathC. and LuffP. (eds), Technology in Action, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
26.
HindsC.J. and WatsonD., (1996), Intensive Care: A Concise Textbook, (second edn), London: WB Saunders.
27.
HirschauerS., (1991), The Manufacture of Bodies in Surgery, Social Studies of Science21(2): 279–319.
28.
HirschauerS., (2005), On Doing Being a Stranger: The Practical Constitution of Civil Inattention, Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour35(1): 41–67.
29.
IllichI., (1991 [1976]), Limits to Medicine: Medical Nemesis – The Expropriation of Health, Harmondsworth: Penguin.
30.
Intensive Care Society, (1997), Standards for Intensive Care Units, London: Intensive Care Society.
31.
KiteK., (1999), Participant observation, peripheral observation or a participant observation?Nurse Researcher7(1): 44–55.
32.
KristevaJ., (1982), Powers of Horror: An Essay on Abjection, (translated by RoudiezL. S.), New York: Colombia University Press.
33.
LatimerJ., (2000), The Conduct of Care: Understanding Nursing Practice, Oxford: Blackwell.
34.
LatimerJ., (2001), All-consuming passions: materials and subjectivity in an age of enhancement, in LeeN. and MunroR. (eds), The Consumption of Mass, Sociological Review Monograph, Oxford: Blackwell.
35.
LatimerJ., (2004), Commanding Materials: (Re)legitimating authority in the context of multidisciplinary work, Sociology38(4): 757–775.
36.
LatimerJ., (2007), Diagnosis, dysmorphology and the family: knowledge, motility, choice, Medical Anthropology26(2): 53–94.
37.
LatimerJ. and MunroR., (2006), Driving the Social, in BöhmS.JonesC.LandC. and PatersonM. (eds), Against Automobility, Oxford: Blackwell.
38.
LatourB., (1987), Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers Through Society, Massachusetts: Harvard.
39.
LatourB., (1991), Technology is society made durable, in LawJ. (ed.), The Sociology of Monsters, London: Routledge.
LawJ., (2004), After Method: Mess in Social Science Research, London: Routledge.
42.
LederD., (1990), The Absent Body, Chicago: Chicago University Press.
43.
LyotardJ-F., (1986), The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge (translated by BenningtonG. and MassumiB.), Manchester: Manchester University Press.
44.
MaussM., (1973 [1934]), Techniques of the Body, (translated by BrewsterB.), Economy and Society2(1): 70–88.
45.
Merleau-PontyM., (1989 [1962]), Phenomenology of Perception, (translated by SmithC.), London: Routledge.
46.
MoreiraT., (2006), Heterogeneity and Coordination of Blood Pressure in Neurosurgery, Social Studies of Science36(1): 69–97.
47.
MunroM., (1996), The consumption view of self: extension, exchange and identity, in EdgellS.HetheringtonK. and WardeA. (eds), Consumption Matters: The Production and Experience of Consumption, Sociological Review Monograph, Oxford: Blackwell.
48.
MunroR., (1999), The cultural performance of control, Organizational Studies20(4): 619–639.
49.
MunroR., (2001), Disposal of the Body: Upending Postmodernism, Ephemera1(2): 108130.
50.
MunroR., (2004), Punctualising identity: time and the demanding relation, Sociology38(2): 293–311.
51.
MunroR., (2005), Partial organization: Marilyn Strathern and the elicitation of relations, The Sociological Review53(1): 245–266.
52.
NietzscheF., (1968), The Will to Power, KaufmanW. (ed.), (translated by KaufmanW. and HolingdaleR. J.), New York: Vintage.
53.
OngW.J., (1988), Orality and Literacy, London: Routledge.
54.
PittsV., (2003), In the Flesh: The Cultural Politics of Body Modification, New York: Palgrave Macmillan.
55.
PlaceB., (2000), Constructing the Bodies of Critically Ill Children: an Ethnography of Intensive Care, in ProutA. (ed.), The Body, Childhood and Society, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
56.
RobillardA.B., (1999), Meaning of a Disability: The Lived Experience of Paralysis, Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
57.
RortyR., (1979), Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
58.
SacksH., (1984), On doing ‘being ordinary’, in AtkinsonJ.M. and HeritageJ. (eds), Structures of Social Action, New York: Cambridge University Press.
59.
ScarryE., (1985), The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World, Oxford University Press: Oxford.
60.
SchwartzM.A., (1997), Airways management in critically ill patients: Prevention and Management of complications, in SchwartzM.A. and MatthayD.E. (eds), Complications in the Intensive Care Unit: Recognition, Prevention and Management, New York: Chapman and Hall.
61.
ShillingC., (2007), Sociology of the body: classical traditions and new agendas, in ShillingC. (ed.), Embodying Sociology: Retrospect, Progress and Prospects, Sociological Review Monograph, Oxford: Blackwell.
62.
StrathernM., (2004), Partial Connections — Updated editionCalifornia: Alta Mira.
63.
StrongP.M., (1979), The Ceremonial Order of the Clinic, London: Routledge.
64.
ZanerR.M., (1985), ‘How the Hell Did I Get Here?’ Reflections on being a patient, in BishopA.H. and ScudderJ.R. (eds), Caring, Curing, Coping: Nurse Physician Patient Relationships, Alabama: University of Alabama Press.
65.
ZussmanR., (1994), Intensive Care: Medical Ethics and the Medical Profession, Chicago: University of Chicago Press.