Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture

By drawing on Jean Baudrillard’s cultural theory this paper aims to show how contemporary popular culture tells the stories of scientifically talented women of the past. In the course of my argument, I refer to books and films set in the past and focus on the women-and-science motif. Firstly, the st...

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Main Author: Oramus Dominika
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Charles University 2020-07-01
Series:Prague Journal of English Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/pjes-2020-0007
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author Oramus Dominika
author_facet Oramus Dominika
author_sort Oramus Dominika
collection DOAJ
description By drawing on Jean Baudrillard’s cultural theory this paper aims to show how contemporary popular culture tells the stories of scientifically talented women of the past. In the course of my argument, I refer to books and films set in the past and focus on the women-and-science motif. Firstly, the stories of individual female scientists living long ago are analysed (Mileva Einstein, Joan Clarke), then, the collective female protagonists – wives of scientists living together in “togethervilles” (Los Alamos, Atomic City), and women scientists pictured in speculative fiction – are discussed. The cliches used in these texts – lonely forgotten geniuses, female worthies taken advantage of, ostracised women accused of not being feminine enough and devoted wives who help their men and their countries in World Wars I and II or the Cold War – reflect ideologies that Western culture used to believe in. Conversely, the two original presentations of past female scientists that I found both come from speculative fiction concerned with science and heavily influenced by the ideologies of science: science and pacifism, science and a sense of guilt, and science as a weapon in the quest for democracy and freedom.
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spelling doaj.art-31dc5632f66546d188cdb62f9203f5cc2024-04-02T08:51:11ZengCharles UniversityPrague Journal of English Studies2336-26852020-07-019113315310.2478/pjes-2020-0007pjes-2020-0007Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular CultureOramus Dominika0University of Warsaw,PolandBy drawing on Jean Baudrillard’s cultural theory this paper aims to show how contemporary popular culture tells the stories of scientifically talented women of the past. In the course of my argument, I refer to books and films set in the past and focus on the women-and-science motif. Firstly, the stories of individual female scientists living long ago are analysed (Mileva Einstein, Joan Clarke), then, the collective female protagonists – wives of scientists living together in “togethervilles” (Los Alamos, Atomic City), and women scientists pictured in speculative fiction – are discussed. The cliches used in these texts – lonely forgotten geniuses, female worthies taken advantage of, ostracised women accused of not being feminine enough and devoted wives who help their men and their countries in World Wars I and II or the Cold War – reflect ideologies that Western culture used to believe in. Conversely, the two original presentations of past female scientists that I found both come from speculative fiction concerned with science and heavily influenced by the ideologies of science: science and pacifism, science and a sense of guilt, and science as a weapon in the quest for democracy and freedom.https://doi.org/10.2478/pjes-2020-0007women-and-sciencelos alamosatomic citymileva einsteinjoan clarke
spellingShingle Oramus Dominika
Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture
Prague Journal of English Studies
women-and-science
los alamos
atomic city
mileva einstein
joan clarke
title Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture
title_full Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture
title_fullStr Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture
title_full_unstemmed Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture
title_short Strangers in Togetherville – Women, Physics and Popular Culture
title_sort strangers in togetherville women physics and popular culture
topic women-and-science
los alamos
atomic city
mileva einstein
joan clarke
url https://doi.org/10.2478/pjes-2020-0007
work_keys_str_mv AT oramusdominika strangersintogethervillewomenphysicsandpopularculture