Neurogenderings
What happens when we approach the brain as a shared object of perplexity? What happens when neuroscientists take the time and effort to reflect upon the past, present, and future progress within their own field? What happens when the question of how to study sex and/or gender differences in the brain is opened up to interdisciplinary perspectives and is not treated as a given? What if dissensus in neuroscience research is seen as an opportunity to think about science, bodies, and technologies otherwise?
This issue is edited by Rebecca Jordan-Young, Giordana Grossi and Gina Rippon
Contributors include Vanessa Bentley, Robyn Bluhm, Katherine Bryant, Beatriz Félix-Canseco, Annie Duchesne, Cordelia Fine , Giordana Grossi, Nur Zeynep Gungor, Daphna Joel, Rebecca Jordan-Young, Anelis Kaiser, Annelies Kleinherenbrink, Sarah Richardson, Gina Rippon, Diana Schellenberg, Sigrid Schmitz & Heather Shattuck-Heidorn, image by Sheila Goloborotko.