{"id":6080,"date":"2011-08-02T09:00:35","date_gmt":"2011-08-02T08:00:35","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=6080"},"modified":"2011-08-02T09:00:35","modified_gmt":"2011-08-02T08:00:35","slug":"unsung-heroes-mae-jemison","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/08\/02\/unsung-heroes-mae-jemison\/","title":{"rendered":"Unsung Heroes: Mae Jemison"},"content":{"rendered":"
At some point in their childhood, most people want to be astronauts when they
grow up. A member of an elite few, taking huge risks in the name of science
and getting to see a view of the Earth no one else will. A lot of children
probably also want to grow up to be doctors; intelligent, prestigious, and
well paid.
Mae Jemison<\/strong> wasn\u2019t content to just aspire to one or the
other. Oh no. Mae Jemison grew up, as she was confident she would, to be a
doctor in space<\/em>. How much ass does that kick? All of it. <\/p>\n
Born in Alabama in 1956, Jemison\u2019s family moved to Chicago in 1959
to take advantage of the better educational opportunities there. Jemison
took to the sciences with ease, doing well enough in her studies that
she was able to enrol at Stanford University aged just 16. <\/p>\n
In kindergarten, my teacher asked me what I wanted to be when I grew
up, and I told her a scientist. She said, ‘Don’t you mean
a nurse?’ Now, there’s nothing wrong with being a nurse,
but that’s not what I wanted to be. <\/p>\n
– Mae
Jemison<\/a><\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Jemison faced barriers due to both racism and sexism at Stanford,
particularly in the engineering department, a place that was (and
unfortunately to some extent still is) the domain of well off white
males. She describes, looking back, occasions where professors would
ignore her input while congratulating her male classmates for the
exact same comments, and credits her success in part to the youthful
arrogance of a teen allowing her to push on through.<\/p>\n
After getting her chemical engineering degree Jemison went on to study
medicine at Cornell, graduating in 1981. She did extensive work abroad
during her time there, ranging from Thailand to Kenya as a primary
care provider, and eventually joining the Peace Corps<\/a> in 1983. With
the Peace Corps she served in Sierra Leone, acting both as a medical
doctor and a writer of guidelines, care manuals, and research
proposals.<\/p>\n
So, we\u2019ve established she\u2019s pretty goddamn awesome as both a
doctor and a scientist. But I promised you a doctor in space, and so
far it\u2019s all been ground bound1<\/a><\/sup>. So, onto her career
with NASA.<\/p>\n
Rejected on her first try, Jemison was accepted into the program
in 1987, the first class of astronauts to be enrolled after the 1986
Challenger disaster<\/a>. She worked in launch support at the
Kennedy Space Centre while training for her launch, helping to
send other shuttle flights up into orbit. Her own turn came in
1992, when she became the first black woman to go into space,
flying aboard the shuttle Endeavour with the six other astronauts
of STS-47<\/a>.<\/p>\n
I wouldn’t have cared less if 2,000 people had gone up
before me … I would still have had my hand up, ‘I
want to do this.’ <\/p>\n
– Mae Jemison, speaking to the
Des Moines Register<\/strong> in 2008<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
For the next 190 hours Jemison would orbit the Earth, one of
the select few to see the planet from above for
themselves.2<\/a><\/sup> She conducted a series of
life science experiments on how living organisms responded
to the microgravity of space. This included one of her own
devising, to study the effects of orbital conditions on
bone cells. On September 20th 1992, Jemison and the rest
of the mission\u2019s crew returned safely to Earth,
having spent the last eight days being awesome enough to
risk death in the name of science.<\/p>\n
STS-47 was to be Jemison\u2019s only space mission, as
she retired from NASA shortly after her return. She
wanted to focus on social issues surrounding technology,
its impact in developing nations, and means of
mitigating future-shock. To this end she founded two
rather cool organisations. First up, doing applied
research, there\u2019s the
Jemison Group<\/strong>, set up to develop technology
for daily life, which has worked on projects including
thermal energy generation for developing countries,
and satellite communications for facilitating health
care in West Africa.<\/p>\n
Her second project was the Dorothy Jemison Foundation for
Excellence<\/strong><\/a>, named for her mother.
The foundation runs international science camps
for students in their teens, aimed at encouraging
people to think globally about how technology can
deal with problems. The group works to build
critical thinking skills and scientific literacy,
which is a pretty damn solid aim.<\/p>\n
Oh, and a last point of geeky coolness (which
obviously is the most important kind), Jemison
appeared in an episode of
Star Trek: The Next Generation<\/strong>
after LeVar
Burton<\/a> discovered she was a fan and
invited her to take part. That makes her the
first real life astronaut to have featured on
the show. It\u2019s a neat bit of circularity,
given that Jemison cites Nichelle
Nichols’s<\/a> performance as Lt. Uhura
as one of her motivations for joining
NASA.<\/p>\n
So, doctor, astronaut, advocate for science
education, and she even got to hang out on
the bridge of the Enterprise. That\u2019s a
pretty good definition for a badass life
right there.<\/p>\n
\n