Making sense of my life in science A memoir
Book - 2023
Evelyn Fox Keller trained as a theoretical physicist at a time when women didn't "do physics." Unable to find a supportive advisor, she moved into the new field of molecular biology just getting off the ground. After receiving her doctorate, she returned to physics but then took another swerve, joining a small interdisciplinary effort to develop mathematical models of biological systems. This work led to her appointment to a special position as Professor of Mathematics and Humanities at Northeastern University. When second-wave feminism arrived in the 1960s, it changed the lives of everyone in its path. It certainly changed Keller's, leading her beyond the borders of science altogether. Eventually she began to think of ...herself as a dual citizen of the proverbial two cultures―science and humanities. The trajectory was hardly straightforward, nor was it conducive to building a conventional career, or even getting a job. Now in hindsight, after an illustrious career and having published fourteen books, Keller reflects on her life, influences, successes and struggles along her trailblazing path as a scientist and feminist.
- Subjects
- Genres
- Biographies
- Published
-
Amherst, Massachusetts :
Modern Memoirs, Inc
[2023]
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Physical Description
- xvii, 206 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references (pages 205-206).
- ISBN
- 9780999770580
- Preface: Who Am I?
- Part I. Family Origins
- Where Do I Begin?
- Early Years
- Politics as Another Way Out
- Part II. My Accidental Journey Towards Becoming a Scientist
- Under the Wings of "Great Men"
- My Brother (and Molecular Biology) to the Rescue
- Starting a New Family and a Professional Life
- Gradually, Haltingly, Maybe, a Career
- Photographs
- Part III. Women, Gender, and Science
- A Different Kind of Question
- Feminism in Academia
- Leaving Terra Firma; A Crucial Turning Point
- From Women in Science to Gender and Science
- Again, a New Start
- From A Feeling for the Organism to Reflections on Gender and Science
- Language and Science: Crossing Yet Another Line in the Sand
- Where Do I Belong?
- Part IV. Homecoming and the Underside of Academic Success
- The MacArthur Award, MIT, and the Science Wars
- The Other Side of the Coin (and the Other Side of the Campus)
- Genetics and Me
- Summing Up
- Afterword: Looking Back
- Bibliography