Lost Women of Science
Ein Podcast von Lost Women of Science - Donnerstags
99 Folgen
-
Adventures of a Bone Hunter
Vom: 4.1.2024 -
Emma Unson Rotor: The Filipina Physicist Who Helped Develop a Top Secret Weapon
Vom: 14.12.2023 -
Flapper of the South Seas: A Young Margaret Mead Travels To The South Seas
Vom: 7.12.2023 -
The Devastating Logic of Christine Ladd-Franklin
Vom: 30.11.2023 -
Best Of: The Feminist Test We Keep Failing
Vom: 23.11.2023 -
From Our Inbox: Mária Telkes, The Biophysicist Who Harnessed Solar Power
Vom: 16.11.2023 -
The Woman Who Demonstrated the Greenhouse Effect
Vom: 9.11.2023 -
Dr. Rebecca Crumpler, America's First Black Female Public Health Pioneer
Vom: 2.11.2023 -
Flemmie Kittrell and the Preschool Experiment
Vom: 26.10.2023 -
From Our Inbox: A Microbe Hunter in Oregon Fights the 1918 Influenza Pandemic
Vom: 19.10.2023 -
The English Lit Major Who Cracked Nazi Codes
Vom: 12.10.2023 -
Who was Christine Essenberg? A remarkable zoologist almost lost to history
Vom: 5.10.2023 -
Dr. Sarah Loguen Fraser, an ex-slave’s daughter, becomes a celebrated doctor
Vom: 28.9.2023 -
A Flair for Efficiency: The Woman Who Redesigned the American Kitchen
Vom: 21.9.2023 -
Part 2: Why Did Lise Meitner Never Receive the Nobel Prize for Splitting the Atom?
Vom: 14.9.2023 -
Part 1: Why Did Lise Meitner Never Receive the Nobel Prize for Splitting the Atom?
Vom: 7.9.2023 -
They Remembered the Lost Women of the Manhattan Project So That We Wouldn't Forget
Vom: 31.8.2023 -
Meet the Physicist who Spoke Out Against the Bomb She Helped Create
Vom: 24.8.2023 -
The Story of the Real Lilli Hornig, the Only Female Scientist Named in the Film Oppenheimer
Vom: 17.8.2023 -
No Place for a Woman in Mathematics? The Woman Who Ended up Supervising The Computations that Proved an Atomic Bomb Would Work
Vom: 3.8.2023
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.