Lost Women of Science
Ein Podcast von Lost Women of Science - Donnerstags
99 Folgen
-
Lost Women of Science Conversations: Wild By Design
Vom: 13.6.2024 -
Revisiting The Pathologist in the Basement: Episode 4 Breakfast in the Snow
Vom: 30.5.2024 -
Revisiting the Pathologist in the Basement: Episode 3 The Case of the Missing Portrait
Vom: 23.5.2024 -
Revisiting the Pathologist in the Basement: Episode 2 The Matilda Effect
Vom: 16.5.2024 -
Revisiting the Pathologist in the Basement
Vom: 9.5.2024 -
Lost Women of Science Conversations: Mathematics for Ladies
Vom: 2.5.2024 -
Elizabeth Bates and the Search for the Roots of Human Language
Vom: 25.4.2024 -
The Theoretical Physicist Who Worked With J. Robert Oppenheimer at the Dawn of the Nuclear Age
Vom: 18.4.2024 -
Best Of: The Highest of All Ceilings, Astronomer Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
Vom: 11.4.2024 -
The Victorian Woman Who Chased Eclipses
Vom: 4.4.2024 -
Lost Women of Science Conversations: Mischievous Creatures
Vom: 28.3.2024 -
The Cognitive Scientist Who Unraveled the Mysteries of Language
Vom: 21.3.2024 -
Best Of: Meet the Physicist who Spoke Out Against the Bomb She Helped Create
Vom: 14.3.2024 -
How Lilian Bland Built Herself A Plane
Vom: 7.3.2024 -
Lost Women of Science Conversations: The Black Angels
Vom: 29.2.2024 -
The Industrial Designer Behind the N95 Mask
Vom: 15.2.2024 -
The Universe in Radio Vision
Vom: 8.2.2024 -
From Our Inbox: Forgotten Electrical Engineer’s Work Paved the Way for Radar Technology
Vom: 1.2.2024 -
Best of: A Complicated Woman, Leona Zacharias
Vom: 25.1.2024 -
From Our Inbox: Vera Peters - The Doctor Who Helped Spare Women From Radical Mastectomy
Vom: 11.1.2024
For every Marie Curie or Rosalind Franklin whose story has been told, hundreds of female scientists remain unknown to the public at large. In this series, we illuminate the lives and work of a diverse array of groundbreaking scientists who, because of time, place and gender, have gone largely unrecognized. Each season we focus on a different scientist, putting her narrative into context, explaining not just the science but also the social and historical conditions in which she lived and worked. We also bring these stories to the present, painting a full picture of how her work endures.