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A Lab of One's Own
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Table of Contents

Preserving the Past, Facing the Future
1: Snapshots: Suffrage and Science at Cambridge
2: A Divided Nation: Class, Gender, and Science in Early Twentieth-Century Britain
3: Subjects of Science: Biological Justifications of Women's Status
Abandoning Domesticity, Working for the Vote
4: A New Century: Voting for Science
5: Factories of Science: Women Work for War
6: Ray Costelloe / Strachey: The Life of a Mathematical Suffragist
Corridors of Science, Crucibles of Power
7: Scientists in Petticoats: Women and Science Before the War
8: A Scientific State: Technological Warfare in the Early Twentieth Century
9: Taking Over: Women, Science and Power During the War
10: Chemical Campaigners: Ida Smedley and Martha Whiteley
Scientific Warfare, Wartime Welfare
11: Soldiers of Science: Scientific Women Fighting on the Home Front
12: Scientists in Khaki: Mona Geddes and Helen Gwynne-Vaughan
13: Medical Recruits: Scientists Care for the Nation
14: From Scotland to Sebastopol: The Wartime Work of Dr Isabel Emslie Hutton
Citizens of Science in a Post-War World
15: Inter-War Normalities: Scientific Women and Struggles for Equality
16: Lessons of Science: Learning from the Past to Improve the Future
Bibliography

About the Author

Patricia Fara lectures in the history of science at Cambridge University, where she is a Fellow of Clare College. She is the President of the British Society for the History of Science (2016-18) and her prize-winning book, Science: A Four Thousand Year History (OUP, 2009), has been translated into nine languages. In addition to many academic publications, her popular works include Newton: The Making of Genius (Columbia University Press, 2002),
An Entertainment for Angels (Icon Books, 2002), Sex, Botany and Empire (Columbia University Press, 2003), and Pandora's Breeches: Women, Science and Power in the Enlightenment (Pimlico, 2004). An experienced public
lecturer, Patricia Fara appears regularly in TV documentaries and radio programmes such as In our Time. She also contributes articles and reviews to many journals, including History Today, BBC History, New Scientist, Nature and the Times Literary Supplement.

Reviews

[An] interesting study.
*Lucy Lethbridge, The Financial Times*

[An] important book ... a compelling tale ... [Fara's] book charts a significant chapter in lost feminist history.
*Wendy Moore, The Guardian*

An engrossing, exciting tale of uncelebrated scientists who innovated and experimented against a background of grand historical events.
*Dava Sobel, The New York Times*

As this remarkable book demonstrates, Fara is not only one of Britain's leading historians of science, but also one of her generation's most eloquent storytellers.

[A] fascinating book ... Carefully researched and absorbing ... Informative and moving, A Lab of One's Own is a timely reminder in helping us eliminate the inequalities that professional women still face today.
*June Purvis, The Times Higher Education Supplement*

[An] enthralling book.
*Uta Frith, Literary Review*

Fara's nuanced narrative [is] more than the sum of its parts.
*Elizabeth Bruton, Nature*

Fara has composed a worthy and lasting tribute to these pioneering women.
*Foreign Affairs*

In short, in A Lab of One's Own Patricia Fara has done a great service to the memory of several leading female scientists in World War I...I would recommend it to scholars interested in learning more about the scientific work conducted by British women during World War I.
*Katie Baca, Harvard University, Nuncius*

[A] powerful book.
*Caspar Henderson, Five Books, Science Books of the Year 2018*

This is an essential read for any scientist seeking to understand their potential.
*Jonelle Harvey, Chemistry World*

A densely written, well-documented history of the British experience that will resonate with American women as well.
*Kirkus Review*

A Lab of One's Own is a great title for an important book.... Patricia Fara paints all the nuances of the trajectories of women scientists, keeping in the background the specificities of a war economy, the instrumental place of science within it and the ambiguities and new challenges faced by women.
*Cléo Chassonnery-Zaïgouche, LSE Review of Books*

A Lab of One's Own is packed with stories of women who deserve greater recognition. More than that though, it resonates with current trends in how women are treated in the workplace even a century after the partial suffrage of 1918.
*Dominic Lenton, E&T Magazine*

A Lab of One's Own is a fascinating introduction to the pioneering women and critical events that gave momentum to the pursuit of equality before, during and after the First World War, from a scientific perspective ... Patricia Fara delivers the story of [the women's fight for equality] in a very accessible way, and a reader need not be a budding scientist to understand and enjoy the writing, which is interspersed with mini biographies of countless women whose heroics continue to inspire ... There is humour to be found often with Fara's writing, and she is not afraid to highlight the contradictions in the scientists' views and actions, unwilling to present them as goddess-like, as historians are perhaps at times guilty of. Refreshingly I think it is therefore a great read for modern day women.
*Zero Filter Books*

This thought-provoking book [...] is history writing at its most compelling.
*Uta Frith, Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Development, UCL Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience*

Fascinating and compelling ... This thought-provoking book should be of interest to the scientist and non-scientist alike.
*Sophie Joyce, ACNR*

An urgent and absorbing tale. Fara's impassioned yet rigorous work never falters or compromises in its search for a history that is both true and continues to matter a very great deal.
*Charlotte Sleigh, Professor of Science Humanities, University of Kent*

Vividly and movingly, A Lab Of One's Own, brings to life the forgotten story of the scientific, mathematical, medical and technological contributions made by British women during the First World War, with legacies and lessons that still matter today. Patricia Fara deserves a medal.
*Gregory Radick, Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Leeds*

Fascinating... [Patricia Fara] has uncovered the hidden, suppressed histories of scientists and clinicians who made great contributions to war and welfare, and she has woven a broader narrative of gain and loss that still resonates today.
*Jeremy Sanders, Former Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Professor of Chemistry, University of Cambridge*

The stories in this book made me very happy that I came of age in the middle of the 20th century, when the world of science welcomed a woman's questions and valued her experiments.
*Maxine F. Singer*

A book full of fascinating insight and anecdote about women working in or with science around the time of the 1st World War. So many hidden stories and amazing heroines.
*Dame Athene Donald*

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