In 1952, Rosalind Franklin produced an image so precise that it revealed the structure of life itself. Working in a basement lab at King's College London, she used X-ray diffraction to photograph DNA.
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What is the 'Matilda Effect'? How science became a man's world by dominance, not by merit
Imagine a child asked to draw a scientist. More often than not, the result is a white-haired man in a lab coat. This seemingly innocent image reveals a deep-rooted problem in the way we imagine—and ...
Margaret W. Rossiter, a historian whose trilogy, "Women Scientists in America," documented in sharp detail the ways women were excised from the annals of science -- and who coined the term "the ...
From Rosalind Franklin to Uzma Khan, female scientists’ feats are often ignored or forgotten. The Matilda Project aims to ...
After watching the magnificent performance of “The Hello Girls” at Syracuse Stage, I must write about a missed opportunity. An article appearing in the program, “Sisters in Arms,” by Matthew Nerber, ...
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