{"id":8406,"date":"2011-11-17T09:00:05","date_gmt":"2011-11-17T09:00:05","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=8406"},"modified":"2011-11-17T09:00:05","modified_gmt":"2011-11-17T09:00:05","slug":"a-snapshot-of-the-past","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/11\/17\/a-snapshot-of-the-past\/","title":{"rendered":"A Snapshot of the Past"},"content":{"rendered":"
The wonderful website Letters of Note<\/strong><\/a> is always worth reading (or following on twitter<\/a>),
and recently they posted a letter which made me reflect on how far
we’ve come in a few decades.<\/p>\n
Astronomer and physicist Carl
Sagan wrote in 1981 to an organisation called “The Explorers
Club”.<\/a> Some history is needed here: this was a group founded in
1905 in New York, as a club for those who pursue “Scientific
Exploration” (including both Explorers and Scientists). A letterhead
he mentions in the note says
To the conquest of the unknown and the advancement of knowledge.<\/em>
Back around 1900, the idea that women could be part of either of those
professions or join the club wasn’t considered. The club then
remained men-only for decades in the name of tradition.<\/p>\n
Sagan was adding his voice to others in the early 1980s asking that
women should be allowed to be members. His letter is polite, but one
middle paragraph is a brilliant list of women who have contributed to
the pursuit of new knowledge:<\/p>\n
There are several women astronauts. The earliest footprints —
3.6 million years old — made by a member of the human family
have been found in a volcanic ash flow in Tanzania by
Mary Leakey<\/strong>. Trailblazing studies of the behavior of
primates in the wild have been performed by dozens of young women,
each spending years with a different primate species.
Jane Goodall<\/strong>‘s studies of the chimpanzee are
the best known of the investigations which illuminate human
origins. The undersea depth record is held by
Sylvia Earle<\/strong> [pictured below]. The solar wind was
first measured in situ by
Marcia Neugebauer<\/strong>, using the Mariner 2
spacecraft. The first active volcanoes beyond the Earth were
discovered on the Jovian moon Io by
Linda Morabito<\/strong>, using the Voyager 1 spacecraft.
These examples of modern exploration and discovery could
be multiplied a hundredfold.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
But that’s not the part which gives me
hope.<\/p>\n
However, I expect that someone writing to the Explorers
Club today might send a very different message. A
message which includes the questions “What do you
think you’re doing?” and “Why are you
being so incredibly blinkered?”. I can well
believe that there was prejudice against the quality of
women’s roles in science in 1981: there’s
prejudice
now<\/em>. But I think the average expectation of
what is normal and fair has genuinely shifted, to the
point that Sagan’s letter reads as quite oddly
passive today.<\/p>\n
In the week when Google celebrated
Marie Curie’s 144th birthday<\/a>, I enjoy
anything which reminds us that we need to move away from the
token lady scientist<\/a> when looking at
women’s roles in the discovery of new
frontiers. This letter is, I hope, an anachronism
today. I also dearly hope it won’t seem normal
again in the future.<\/p>\n