1. Introduction - Lindsay Anne Balfour.- Part I: Constructing a Critical FemTech Discourse.- 2. "Hysteria Under Watch: Biological Essentialism and Surveillance in Menstrual Tracking Applications" - Niktalia Jules.- 3. "Reinventing the Beauty Myth? FemTech's Cost to the Consumer" - Hannah Westwood.- 4. "Fertile Becoming: Reproductive Temporalities with/in Tracking Technologies" - Lara Reime, Marisa Cohn, Vasiliki Tsaknaki.- Part II: FemTech at the Margins.- 5. "One Size (doesn't) Fit All: A Closer Look at FemTech Apps and Datafied Reproductive Body Projects in India" - Paro Mishra, Ravinder Kaur, Shambhawi Vikram.- 6. "Artificial Intelligence and Reproducing Female Hairlessness as Social Stigma" - Georgia Roberts.- 7. "The Insta-Trainer: a study of how Instagram is used as a biopedagogical tool for health and wellbeing among young women in Qatar" - Sara Al Derham.- 8. "Hoop Dreams or Hoop Nightmares: Athletics, Fitness Tracking, and the Surveillance of the Black Body" - Rachel D. Roberson.- 9. "FemTech and taboo topics: Raaji as a tool for educating women in Pakistan" - Khawar Latif Khan and Farah Azhar.- 10. "FemTech in (and for) Emerging Markets: Narratives from Kenya" - Sarah Seddig - Part III: FemTech to (Over)come: "New Methods, Technoselves and Data Sovereignty".- 11. "Wearing Danger: Surveillance, Control and Quantified Healthism in American Medicine" - Rebecca Monteleone and Ally Day.- 12. "Between Liberation and Control: Mixing Methods to Investigate How users experience Menstrual Cycle Tracking Applications" - Lisa Stuifzand and
Rik Smit.- 13. 13. "Using and Interpreting FemTech data: (Self-)knowledge, empowerment, and sovereignty" - Stefano Canali and Chris
Hesselbein.