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Pandora's Breeches: Women, Science and Power in the Enlightenment (Paperback)
$22.64 - Save $1.20 (5%) - RRP $23.84 Free delivery worldwide (to United States and
all these other countries) Usually dispatched within 48 hours | |Short Description for Pandora's BreechesThis is an original and highly readable exploration of how women of the 17th and 18th centuries engaged in science and contributed to its rapid growth.
Full description- Publisher: PIMLICO
- Published: 04 March 2004
- Format: Paperback 212 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Gender Studies: Women | Science: General Issues | History Of Science | Popular Science | General & World History
- ISBN 13: 9781844130825 ISBN 10: 1844130827
- Sales rank: 632,774
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Full description for Pandora's Breeches
'Had God intended Women merely as a finer sort of cattle, he would not have made them reasonable.' Writing in 1673, Bathsua Makin was one of the first women to insist that girls should receive a scientific education. Despite the efforts of Makin and her successors, women were excluded from universities until the end of the nineteenth century, yet they found other ways to participate in scientific projects. Because these were being carried out inside private houses, rather than in universities or industrial laboratories, experiments often involved the whole family. As well as collaborating in this home-based research, women corresponded with internationally renowned scholars, hired tutors, and even published their own books. They played essential roles in work that was frequently attributed solely to their husbands, fathers or friends. Women, in this way, have not been written out of the history of science: they have never been written in. If mentioned at all, they appear in subservient roles as helpless admirers or menial assistants. Historians always decide which facts to emphasise, and they generally choose to depict a vision of scientific progress that ignores women's activities.

