AppaduraiA (1988) Introduction: Commodities and the politics of value. In: AppaduraiA (eds) The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 3–63.
2.
ArièsP (1974) Western Attitudes Toward Death: From the Middle Ages to the Present. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.
3.
BallardJG (1973) Crash. London: Jonathan Cape.
4.
BeckerE (1975) The Denial of Death. New York: The Free Press.
5.
BenderB (2020) Landscapes and politics. In: BuchliV (eds) The Material Culture Reader. London and New York: Routledge, 135–140.
6.
BlochMParryJ (1982) Death and the Regeneration of Life. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
7.
CarrollTJeevendrampillaiDParkhurstA, et al. (2017) Introduction: Towards a general theory of failure. In: CarrollTJeevendrampillaiDParkhurstA (eds) The Material Culture of Failure: When Things Do Wrong. London: Bloomsbury, 1–20.
8.
CaswellGTurnerN (2021) Ethical challenges in researching and telling the stories of recently deceased people. Research Ethics17(2): 162–175.
9.
ColeDR (2013) Traffic Jams: Analysing Everyday Life Through the Immanent Materialism of Deleuze & Guattari. Brooklyn, NY: Punctum Books.
10.
DantT (2004) The driver-car. Theory. Culture and Society21(4): 61–79.
11.
DantTBowlesD (2003) Dealing with dirt: Servicing and repairing cars. Sociological Research Online8(2): 1–17.
12.
DeLandaM (2016) Assemblage Theory. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.
13.
DeleuzeGGuattariF (1987) A Thousand Plateaus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia. Minneapolis: University of Minnnesota Press.
14.
DeleuzeGParnetC (2007) Dialogues II. New York: Columbia University Press.
15.
DouglasM (1984) Purity and Danger: An Analysis of Concepts of Pollution and Taboo. London and New York: Routledge.
16.
EdensorT (2004) Automobility and national identity: Representation, geography and driving practice. Theory, Culture and Society21(4–5): 101–120.
17.
FeatherstoneM (2004) Automobilities: An Introduction. Theory. Culture and Society21(4–5): 1–24.
18.
Giraldo HerreraCEPalssonG (2019) Corporate skin: Biosocial relations, tropes, and institutions in prosthetics research and development. Journal of Material Culture24(3): 360–380.
19.
GuilleminMGillamL (2004) Ethics, reflexivity, and „ethically important moments“ in research. Qualitative Inquiry10(2): 261–280.
20.
HughesEC (1958) Men and Their Work. Toronto: Collier-Macmillan.
21.
IngoldT (2012) Towards an ecology of materials. Annual Review of Anthropology41: 427–442.
22.
KatzP (1981) Ritual in the operating room. Ethnology20(4): 335–350.
23.
KeaneW (2003) Semiotics and the social analysis of material things. Language & Communication23: 409–425.
24.
KopytoffI (1988) The cultural biography of things: Commoditization as process. In: AppaduraiA (eds) The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 64–91.
25.
KrálováJ (2015) What is social death?Contemporary Social Science10(3): 235–248.
26.
KruglovaA (2019) Driving in terrain: Automobility, modernity, and the politics of statelessness in russia. American Ethnologist46: 457–469.
27.
LakoffGJohnsonM (1980) Metaphors We Live By. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press.
28.
MetcalfPHuntingtonR (1979) Celebration of Death: The Anthropology of Mortuary Ritual. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
RannenbergK, et al. (2016) Opportunities and risks associated with collecting and making usable additional data. In: MaurerMGerdesJCLenzB (eds) Autonomous Driving: Technical, Legal and Social Aspects. Berlin and Heidelberg: Springer, 497–517.
36.
RenoJ (2016) Waste Away: Working and Living with A North American Landfill. Berkeley: University of California Press.
37.
RobbenACGM (2004) Death, Mourning, and Burial: A Cross-Cultural Reader. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.
38.
SartreJP (1984) Being and Nothingness. New York: Washington Square Books.
39.
Scheper-HughesN (2002a) Bodies for sale - whole or in parts. In: Scheper-HughesNWacquantL (eds) Commodifying Bodies. London: Sage, 1–8.
SharpLA (2000) The commodification of the body and Its parts. Annual Review of Anthropology29: 287–328.
43.
SharpLA (2001) Commodified Kin: Death, mourning, and competing claims on the bodies of organ donors in the United States. American Anthropologist103(1): 112–133.
44.
SharpLA (2014) The Transplant Imaginary: Mechanical Hearts, Animal Parts, and Moral Thinking in Highly Experimental Science. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
45.
ShellerM (2004) Automotive emotions: Feeling the Car. Theory, Culture and Society21(4–5): 221–242.
46.
ŠkaraD (2004) Body metaphors - reading the body in contemporary culture. Collegium Antropologicum28(1): 183–189.
47.
SmithK (2012) From dividual and individual selves to porous subjects. The Australian Journal of Anthropology23: 50–64.
48.
SodermanBCarterR (2008) The auto salvage: A space of second chances. Space and Culture11(1): 20–38.
49.
SosnaD (2021) Magnetism of strangeness: Silenced histories of landscapes. History and Anthropology, 1–19. DOI: 10.1080/02757206.2021.1946046.
50.
StrathernM (1988) The Gender of the Gift: Problems With Women and Problems With Society in Melanesia in Melanesian Anthropology. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
51.
StrathernM (1992) After Nature: English Kinship in the Late Twentieth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
UrryJ (2000) Sociology Beyond Societies: Mobilities for the Twenty-First Century. New York: Routledge.
54.
UrryJ (2004) The ‘system’ of automobility. Theory, Culture and Society21(4-5): 25–39.
55.
WarnierJ-P (2001) A praxeological approach to subjectivation in a material world. Journal of Material Culture6(1): 5–24.
56.
WarnierJ-P (2009) Technology as efficacious action on objects … and subjects. Journal of Material Culture14(4): 459–570.
57.
WarnierJ-P, et al. (2006) Inside and outside: Surfaces and containers. In: TilleyCKeaneWĶchlerS (eds) Handbook of Material Culture. London, Thousands Oaks, New Delhi: Sage, 186–195.
58.
YoungD (2001) The life and death of cars: Private vehicles on the pitjantjatjara lands, south Australia. In: MillerD (eds) Car Cultures. Oxford: Berg, 35–57.