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Our Science, Ourselves: How Gender, Race, and Social Movements Shaped the Study of Science (Activist Studies of Science & Technology)

Our Science, Ourselves: How Gender, Race, and Social Movements Shaped the Study of Science (Activist Studies of Science & Technology)

Current price: $99.00
Publication Date: October 11th, 2024
Publisher:
University of Massachusetts Press
ISBN:
9781625348197
Pages:
352
Available for Preorder

Description

When Christa Kuljian arrived on the Harvard College campus as a first-year student in the fall of 1980 with copies of Our Bodies, Ourselves and Ms. magazine, she was concerned that the women’s movement had peaked in the previous decade. She soon learned, however, that there was a long way to go in terms of achieving equality for women and that social movements would continue to be a critical force in society. She began researching the history of science and gender biases in science, and how they intersect with race, class, and sexuality.

In Our Science, Ourselves, Kuljian tells the origin story of feminist science studies by focusing on the life histories of six key figures—Ruth Hubbard, Rita Arditti, Evelyn Fox Keller, Evelynn Hammonds, Anne Fausto-Sterling, and Banu Subramaniam. These women were part of a trailblazing network of female scientists in the 1970s, 80s, and 90s who were drawn to the Boston area—to Harvard, MIT, and other universities—to study science, to network with other scientists, or to take a job. Inspired by the social and political activism of the women’s movement and organizations such as Science for the People, the Genes and Gender Collective, and the Combahee River Collective, they began to write and teach about women in science, gender and science, and sexist and racist bias and exclusion. They would lead the critiques of E. O. Wilson’s sociobiology in 1975 and Larry Summers’ comments about women in science thirty years later.

Drawing on a rich array of sources that combines published journal articles and books with archival materials and interviews with major luminaries of feminist science studies, Kuljian chronicles and celebrates the contributions that these women have made to our collective scientific knowledge and view of the world.

About the Author

Christa Kuljian grew up in the Boston area, and has lived in Johannesburg, South Africa for the past thirty years. She is a science writer and the author of Sanctuary and Darwin’s Hunch: Science, Race and the Search for Human Origins, which was short listed for the Sunday Times Alan Paton Award for Non-Fiction. Currently a Research Associate at the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research (WiSER) at Wits University, she is also a fellow with the Consortium on the History of Science, Medicine and Technology (CHSMT) in Philadelphia. 

Praise for Our Science, Ourselves: How Gender, Race, and Social Movements Shaped the Study of Science (Activist Studies of Science & Technology)

"Writing in lucid and accessible prose, and with a primary source base that is extensive and offers a strong background for understanding the personal dimensions of this history, Kuljian has something important to tell us about the origins of feminist science studies."—Jenna Tonn, assistant professor of the practice, Department of Engineering, Boston College, whose current book project is Boys in the Laboratory: Gender and the Rise of the American Life Sciences