Edited books and special issues
- Lupton, D. and Feldman, Z. (editors) (2020) Digital Food Cultures. London: Routledge.
- Lupton, D. (editor) (2020) ‘Sociology and the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Pandemic’, Health Sociology Review special section (volume 29, issue 2).
Book chapters
- Lupton, D. (2020) Understanding digital food cultures. In Lupton, D. and Feldman, Z. (eds), Digital Food Cultures. London: Routledge, pp. 1-16.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Carnivalesque food videos: excess, gender and affect on YouTube. In Lupton, D. and Feldman, Z. (eds), Digital Food Cultures. London: Routledge, pp. 35-49.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Wearable devices: sociotechnical imaginaries and agential capacities. In Pedersen, I. and Iliadis, A. (eds), Embodied Technology: Wearables, Implantables, Embeddables, Ingestibles. Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press, pp. 49-69.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Vital materialism and the thing-power of lively digital data. In Leahy, D., Fitzpatrick, K. and Wright, J. (eds), Social Theory, Health and Education. London: Routledge, pp. 71-80.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Caring dataveillance: women’s use of apps to monitor pregnancy and children. In Green, L., Holloway, D., Stevenson, K., Leaver, T. and Haddon, L. (eds), The Routledge Companion to Digital Media and Children. London: Routledge, pp. 393-402.
- Lupton, D. (2020) The sociology of mobile apps. In Rohlinger, D. and Sobieraj, S. (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Sociology and Digital Media. New York: Oxford, online first.
Journal articles
- Maslen, S. and Lupton, D. (2020) Enacting chronic illness with and through digital media: a feminist new materialist approach. Information, Communication and Society, 23(11), 1640-1654.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Data mattering and self-tracking: what can personal data do? Continuum, 34(1), 1-13.
- Lupton, D. (2020) ‘Better understanding about what’s going on’: young Australians’ use of digital technologies for health and fitness. Sport, Education and Society, 25(1), 1-13.
- Lupton, D. (2020) The story completion method and more-than-human theory: finding and using health information. Sage Research Methods Cases, available online at https://methods.sagepub.com/case/story-completion-method-more-than-human-theory-health-information
- Lupton, D. (2020) The Internet of Things: social dimensions. Sociology Compass, 14, available online at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/soc4.12770
- Lupton, D. (2020) Teaching and learning guide – The Internet of Things: social dimensions. Sociology Compass, 14, available at https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/soc4.12777
- Lupton, D. (2020) Australian women’s use of health and fitness apps and wearable devices: a feminist new materialism analysis. Feminist Media Studies, 20(7), 993-998.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Thinking with care about personal data profiling: a more-than-human approach. International Journal of Communication, 14, 3165-3183, available online at https://ijoc.org/index.php/ijoc/article/view/13540
- Lupton, D. (2020) ‘Not the real me’: social imaginaries of personal data profiling. Cultural Sociology, online first. doi.org/10.1177/1749975520939779
- Lupton, D. (2020) A more-than-human approach to bioethics: the example of digital health. Bioethics, 34(9), 969-976.
- Lupton, D. and Watson, A. (2020) Towards a more-than-human digital data studies: developing research-creation methods. Qualitative Research, online first. doi:org/10.1177/1468794120939235
- Watson, A. and Lupton, D. (2020) Tactics, affects and agencies in digital privacy narratives: a story completion study. Online Information Review, online first. doi.org/10.1108/OIR-05-2020-0174
- Watson, A., Lupton, D. and Michael, M. (2020) Enacting intimacy and sociality at a distance in the COVID-19 crisis: the sociomaterialities of home-based communication technologies. Media International Australia, online first. doi: doi.org/10.1177/1329878X2096156
Reports
- Rich, E., Lewis, S., Lupton, D. and Miah, A. (2020) Digital Health Generation? Young People’s Use of ‘Healthy Lifestyle’ Technologies. Bath: University of Bath, UK. Available at https://www.digitalhealthgeneration.net/final-report
- Newman, C., MacGibbon, J., Smith, A. K. J., Broady, T., Lupton, D., Davis, M., Bear, B., Bath, N., Comensoli, D., Cook, T., Duck-Chong, E., Ellard, J., Kim, J., Rule, J., & Holt, M. (2020). Understanding Trust in Digital Health among Communities Affected by BBVs and STIs in Australia. Sydney: UNSW Centre for Social Research in Health. Available at http://doi.org/10.26190/5f6d72f17d2b5
- Fox, B., Goggin, G., Lupton, D., Regenbrecht, H., Scuffham, P. and Vucetic, B. (2020) The Internet of Things. Report for the Australian Council of Learned Academies. Melbourne: ACOLA. Available at https://acola.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/hs5_internet-of-things_report.pdf
Other publications
- Lupton, D. (2020) (editor) Doing Fieldwork in a Pandemic (crowdsourced document).
- Lupton, D. (2020) Special section on ‘Sociology and the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic’. Health Sociology Review, 29(2), 111-112.
- Lupton, D. (2020) Digital media and health. In Merkin, D. (ed.), Sage International Encyclopedia of Mass Media and Society. Online. Available at https://sk.sagepub.com/reference/the-sage-encyclopedia-of-mass-media-and-society/i5623.xml
- Lupton, D. (2020) The need for urgent social research in a COVID-19 society. In 12 Perspectives on the Pandemic: International Social Science Thought Leaders Reflect on COVID-19 (open access publication by De Gruyter, Berlin). Available at https://www.degruyter.com/fileasset/craft/media/doc/DG_12perspectives_socialsciences.pdf
Photo credit: Glen Carrie, Unsplash
Amazing! Really want to work with you on an project about loneliness. I am just a medical doctor but love anthropology and sociology . Can we find a way to chat ? Thanks . Chariklia Tziraki-Segal MD
On Fri, Jan 8, 2021, 07:23 This Sociological Life wrote:
> Deborah Lupton posted: ” Edited books and special issues Lupton, D. and > Feldman, Z. (editors) (2020) Digital Food Cultures. London: > Routledge.Lupton, D. (editor) (2020) ‘Sociology and the Coronavirus > (COVID-19) Pandemic’, Health Sociology Review special section (vol” >