World History · Semester B TEKS 28B-28C
Medium
The 20TH-CENTURY DEVELOPMENT of SCIENTIFIC RECOGNITION for INDIVIDUAL WOMEN in various fields produced which SPECIFIC NOBEL-PRIZE-LEVEL RECIPIENTS?
AWidely rejected in modern historical scholarship as an inaccurate 19th-century reconstruction of a much more limited underlying event, with little primary-source basis.
BBest understood as a legendary elaboration by later chroniclers rather than as a documented historical event, with the actual underlying circumstances being far more modest.
CMarie Curie (Physics 1903, Chemistry 1911, first person to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences); Dorothy Hodgkin (Chemistry 1964, X-ray crystallography of biomolecular structures); Barbara.
DSubstantially reversed within a single generation by successor regimes, producing no durable political or cultural transformation and leaving few traces in subsequent centuries.
Explanation
20th-century development of scientific recognition for individual women in various fields produced specific Nobel-Prize-level recipients. Marie Curie (born Maria Skłodowska in Poland, 1867–1934, Polish-French scientist) received Physics Nobel 1903 (shared with Pierre Curie and Henri Becquerel for radioactivity research) and Chemistry Nobel 1911 (for polonium and radium isolation and study) — becoming the first person to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences. Dorothy Hodgkin (British chemist, 1910–1994) received Chemistry Nobel 1964 for X-ray crystallography determinations of biomolecular structures (particularly penicillin and vitamin B-12). Barbara McClintock (American geneticist, 1902–1992) received Physiology or Medicine Nobel 1983 for her work on transposable genetic elements ('jumping genes') that reshaped understanding of genome dynamics. Rita Levi-Montalcini (Italian-American neurobiologist, 1909–2012) received Physiology or Medicine Nobel 1986 (shared with Stanley Cohen) for nerve growth factor discovery. Jennifer Doudna (American, 1964–) and Emmanuelle Charpentier (French, 1968–) received Chemistry Nobel 2020 for CRISPR-Cas9 gene-editing method development. Various others including Gerty Cori (Physiology or Medicine 1947, first American woman Nobel laureate in science), Rosalyn Yalow (Physiology or Medicine 1977, radioimmunoassay), Christiane Nüsslein-Volhard (Physiology or Medicine 1995, embryonic development), Elizabeth Blackburn and Carol Greider (Physiology or Medicine 2009, telomerase), and various others whose specific work advanced scientific fields. Historical underrepresentation of women in Nobel Prize awards (compared to their share of scientific workforce and contributions) remains substantially discussed.
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