Today's commentary by Washington Post writer Dana Milbank offered a forceful reminder that women are often talked-over by men. Milbank's offering comes just three days after I attended a special event at the National Museum of Women in the Arts that featured Judy Chicago, a feminist artist whose 1970s sculpture, "Dinner Party," celebrates not only the geometry of triangles and circles but also the contributions of women to our world -- 39 women celebrated by place settings and 999 additional women's names recorded therein. Even though Judy Chicago insisted last Sunday that she is not fearless, her record of behavior is as fearless as I have known. I think it is not possible to talk-over Judy Chicago. She is someone I much-admire.
Showing posts with label Hypatia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hypatia. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 20, 2017
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Women in Mathematics Count!
The theme for 2016 Mathematics Awareness Month is "The Future of Prediction." And today I am wondering what date can be predicted for when the achievements of women in mathematics will be recognized with the same awareness as those of men.
How many female mathematicians can you name?
Here are links to two articles to to help you lengthen your list of math-women: "12 Brilliant Female Mathematicians You Should Know" -- an article by Olivia Harrison whose list starts with Hypatia (who lived around 400 AD) and continues to the 21st century, featuring Maryam Mirzakhani, an Iranian mathematician at Stanford who in 2014 won the prestigious Fields Medal for her work related to the symmetry of curved surfaces. Judy Green adds important names in her article "How Many Women Mathematicians Can You Name?"For still more, visit my 2015 post "The culture for women in math and the sciences"; additionally, a search of this blog using "math women" will lead to a host of names and links. Enjoy!
Here are the closing lines of a poem of mine about the brilliant mathematician, Emmy Noether (1883-1935):
In spite of Emmy's talents,
always there were reasons
not to give her rank
or permanent employment.
She's a pacifist, a woman.
She's a woman and a Jew.
Her abstract thinking
is female and abstruse.
Today, history books proclaim that Noether
is the greatest mathematician
her sex has produced. They say she was good
for a woman.
The full poem is available here.
Thursday, March 31, 2016
The Future of Prediction
As well as being National Poetry Month, April is Mathematics Awareness Month and this year's theme is "The Future of Prediction." In search of a poem on the theme, I found the following sonnet by poet Joyce Nower -- third in a section of 20 sonnets, "Meditations of Hypatia of Alexandria," in her collection, The Sister Chronicles and Other Poems (IUniverse, 2012), available in both print and electronic versions.
3. Scales Can't Calculate* by Joyce Nower
Hypatia, Math, God One, can't plot the locus
of soul and star, predict exactly where
and when you die, whose hand deals death. No hocus
3. Scales Can't Calculate* by Joyce Nower
Hypatia, Math, God One, can't plot the locus
of soul and star, predict exactly where
and when you die, whose hand deals death. No hocus
Labels:
April,
Hypatia,
Joyce Nower,
math,
Mathematics Awareness Month,
predict,
prediction
Saturday, July 14, 2012
More of Hypatia -- brave, smart woman
Poet and blogger Ellen Moody offers a lively and informative feature on poet Elizabeth Tollett (1694-1754); Tollett, too, wrote of forebears she admired, including Hypatia (c. 370 C. E. - 415 C.E.) -- who has been described as the first woman to make a substantial contribution to mathematics. In contrast with Anne Harding Woodworth's focus on the tortured death of Hypatia, Tollett's lines portray the struggles of her life.
What cruel laws depress the female kind,
To humble cares and servile tasks confined!
In gilded toys their florid bloom to spend,
And empty glories that in age must end;
For amorous youth to spread the artful snares,
And by their triumphs to enlarge their cares.
Labels:
discrimination,
Elizabeth Tollett,
Ellen Moody,
Hypatia,
mathematical,
mathematician,
mathematics,
poem,
poetry,
torture,
woman
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
She died for mathematics
Hypatia of Alexandria (in Greek: Υπατία) (c. 370 C.E. – 415 C.E.) was a popular Egyptian female philosopher, mathematician, astronomer/astrologer, and teacher in Egypt. Her father Theon, a mathematician and the last librarian of the Museum at Alexandria, educated her in literature, science and philosophy, and gave her credit for writing some of his mathematical treatises.
Labels:
Anne Harding Woodworth,
death,
Hypatia,
mathematics,
oyster shells,
poetry,
Theon,
torture,
Ypatia
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