From Chronicle Online: Book recounts activism, struggles of U.S. women scientists
For four decades, Cornell science historian Margaret Rossiter has
been researching, writing and publishing on the history of women
scientists in America. She started in 1972, when everyone assured her
that there had never been any women scientists in the United States, or
anywhere, she said.
"Not even Madame Curie counted. But the more I looked, the more I
found," said Rossiter, the Marie Underhill Noll Professor of History of
Science.
Rossiter has completed a trilogy on the topic, with her third book
focusing on women scientists' most recent pioneering efforts and
contributions. In "Women Scientists in America: Forging a New World
Since 1972" (Johns Hopkins University Press), she guides us from the
"rather quiet, mundane, even ladylike" emergence of female researchers'
first interest groups to their later direct confrontations.
Central to this story are the struggles and successes of "clever,
astute, hardworking and determined" women scientists in the era of
affirmative action. Scores of previously isolated women scientists were
suddenly energized to do things they had rarely, if ever, done before:
form organizations and recruit new members, start rosters and projects,
put out newsletters, confront authorities and even fight (and win)
lawsuits. Rossiter follows the major activities of these groups in
several fields -- from engineering to the physical, biological and
social sciences -- and their campaigns to raise consciousness, see
legislation enforced, lobby for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment
and serve as watchdogs of the media.
The 528-page book also covers the changing employment picture in the
federal government, academia, industry and the nonprofit sector and
discusses contemporary battles to increase the number of women in the
National Academy of Sciences and of women presidents of scientific
societies.
Rossiter mined nearly 100 previously unexamined archival collections and more than 50 oral histories to write the book.
The previous books in her series are "Women Scientists in America:
Struggles and Strategies to 1940" and "Women Scientists in America:
Before Affirmative Action, 1940-72," also published by Johns Hopkins
University Press. The former won an award for the best book by an
American woman from the Berkshire Conference of Women Historians. The
latter was the winner in 1997 of the History of Science Society's Pfizer
Award for Outstanding Book in the History of Science.
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