|












|
|
Women in Biology Internet Launch pages
Page 4: Quotes, Books, and Other sites
This section of the Women in Biology Launch Page provides links related to books and bibliographies, and miscellaneous other sites for women in science.
If you just arrived, please start at the first page for an introduction to the site and an index (you can also use the buttons at left to navigate to other pages). The starting page provides a special section for all recent additions to this site; these will eventually be moved to their appropriate category as new resources are added.
Links I consider to be of particular interest or use. Your mileage may vary.
Direct quotations are in color.
|
|
|
|
Section contents:
Quotations
Blogs
Bibliography
Books
|
The Written Word
-
Women Scientists in fiction,
a review from HMS Beagle (requires free password). This interesting essay describes
several novels featuring women scientists and discusses how they reflect real life. Links to
other sites about scientists in fiction. Longer version of the same essay is on the author's personal website.
- Scientists turned authors: someone ought to write a book.
Quotations by women
Blogs by women scientists, and discussion forums
Links to your library: Bookshelves and bibliographies
Books of interest to women scientists Links are provided for descriptions; not an endorsement of any commercial site!
Most of these fall in the categories of women scientist's history/biography , chilly climate , or practical career information (often relevant to women AND men). A few I classify as "other" .
Also be sure to check out the reports page. Lots of the NAP books, NSF and other reports are listed there, because they are free on line. This section lists print-only books without online access.
Women of Academe : Outsiders in the Sacred Grove
by Nadya Aisenberg and Mona Harrington
Hypatia's Heritage : A History of Women in Science from Antiquity Through the Nineteenth Century by Margaret Alic
Journeys of Women in Science and Engineering : No Universal Constants by Susan A. Ambrose, Kristin L. Dunkle, Barbara B. Lazarus, Indira Nair, Deborah A. Harkus. 88 short interviews with women at all levels, in all kinds of science.
American Women in Science 1950 to the Present : A Biographical Dictionary by Martha Bailey
Fungus Fighters : Two Women Scientists and Their Discovery by Richard S Baldwin
At the Bench, by Kathy Barker. My lab uses this introduction-to-labwork all the time; it's required reading for all our new students about lab practices and behavior.
At the Helm, by Kathy Barker. The sequel to the above book, this one is for new PIs.
Parenting and ProfessingBalancing Family Work with an Academic Career by
Rachel Hile Bassett
Advice for New Faculty Members: Nihil Nimus
by Robert Boice
On the Market : Surviving the Academic Job Search ed. Christina Boufis and Victoria C. Olsen
Lifting a Ton of Feathers : A Woman's Guide to Surviving in the Academic World by Paula J. Caplan
Everyday Knowledge and Uncommon Truths : Women in the Academy by Linda K. Christian-Smith (Editor), Kristine S. Kellor (Editor)
Lab Dynamics: Management Skills for Scientists Carl M. Cohen and Suzanne L. Cohen
The Family Track : Keeping Your Faculties While You Mentor, Nurture, Teach, and Serve by Constance Coiner (Editor), Diana Hume George (Editor)
The Tangled Field : Barbara McClintock's Search for the Patterns of Genetic Control by Nathaniel C. Comfort
Walking Out on the Boys by Frances K. Conley
Tenure in the Sacred Grove: Issues and Strategies for Women and Minority Faculty
by Joanne E. Cooper (Editor), Dannelle D. Stevens (Editor)
Every Other Thursday: Stories and strategies from successful women scientists, by Ellen Daniell
Scientific Papers and Presentations by Martha Davis
Women's Science : Learning and Succeeding from the Margins by Margaret A. Eisenhart and Elizabeth Finkel. This book examines how women often do science from outside the usual path.
Athena Unbound: The advancement of women in science and technology by Henry Etzkowitz, Carol Kemelgor, and Brian Uzzi. This is one of a recent flood of books describing women's experiences in the sciences, particularly at the faculty level. It has the right amount of real data (not just anecdotes) and is a fast read. .
A Ph.D. Is Not Enough : A Guide to Survival in Science by Peter J. Feibelman
Academic Couples: Problems and Promises edited by Marianne A. Ferber and Jane W. Loeb
Dorothy Hodgkin: a life by Georgina Ferry
To Boldly Go: A Practical Career Guide for Scientists by Peter Fiske
A Hand Up : Women Mentoring Women in Science
ed Deborah C. Fort (AWIS Publication)
Creating a Life: Professional Women and the Quest for Children by Sylvia Ann Hewitt
Women, Science and Medicine 1500-1700 : Mothers and Sisters of the Royal Society ed. Lynette Hunter , Sarah Hutton
Women of Science : Righting the Record ed. G. Kass-Simon , Patricia Farnes, Deborah Nash
The Survival Bible for Women in Medicine
by Kathryn K. Ko
The Woman's Guide to Navigating the Ph.d in Engineering and Science by Barbara B. Lazarus, Lisa M. Ritter & Susan A. Ambrose
Defining Women's Scientific Enterprise:Ê Mount Holyoke Faculty and the Rise of American Science by Miriam Levin
Jump Start your
Career in Bioscience by Chandra Louise
Coming of Age in Academe: Rekindling Women's Hopes and Reforming the Academy by Jane Roland Martin
How to Succeed in Academics
by Edward R. B. McCabe and Linda McCabe
Nobel Prize Women in Science : Their Lives, Struggles, and Momentous Discoveries by Sharon Bertsch McGrayne
Faculty in New Jobs : A Guide to Settling In, Becoming Established, and Building Institutional Support by Robert J. Menges
Women Changing Science : Voices from a Field in Transition by Mary Morse
Research Proposals: A Guide to Success by Thomas E. Ogden (Editor), Israel A. Goldberg (Editor) .
Women in Science : Antiquity Through the Nineteenth Century . A Biographical Dictionary With Annotated Bibliography by Marilyn Bailey Ogilvie
Profiles of Pioneer Women Scientists by Elizabeth Moot O'Hern
Tomorrow's Professor:Preparing for Academic Careers in Science and Engineering by Robert Reis. This is an excellent and very thorough guide to building a career in academic science. I wish I'd had it when I started my own job search.
Alternative Careers in Science : Leaving the Ivory Tower, ed. Cynthia Robbins-Roth
Career Renewal: A guide for scientists by Stephen Rosen and Celia Paul
The science glass ceiling: academic women scientists and the struggle to succeed. Sue V. Rosser.
Women Scientists in America : Before Affirmative Action, 1940-1972
by Margaret W. Rossiter
Women Scientists in America : Struggles and Strategies to 1940
by Margaret W. Rossiter
Has Feminism Changed Science by Londa L. Schiebinger
Disciplined Minds: A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals and the Soul-Battering System That Shapes Their Lives, by Jeff Schmidt. Think grad school is brutal? This book describes it as an indoctrination into a values-to-order system.
Women in Science and Engineering : Choices for Success by Cecily Cannan Selby (Editor). (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Volume 869; proceedings from a conference)
Notable Women in the Life Sciences ed. Benjamin F. Shearer, Barbara S. Shearer
Winning the Games the Scientists Play by Carl Sinderman
Who Succeeds in Science? : The Gender Dimension by Gerhard Sonnert, Gerald Holton, Linda S. Wilson. See chilly climate section for a link to an online
summary of this study from Scientific American Explorations.
Ms. Mentor's Impeccable Advice for Women in Academia by Emily Toth. This addresses a number of important truths about women's lives in academe with arch humor. Brief, but pithy. Highly .
Why So Slow? : The Advancement of Women
by Virginia Valian .Why is it that women start out about equal to men, but don't finish up there? A discussion of the cumulative effect of small slights....
The Door in the Dream: Conversations with Eminent Women in Science by E. Wasserman.You can also read it for free online!
The Woman Scientist : Meeting the Challenges for a Successful Career by Clarice M. Yentsch, Carl Sindermann.
The Outer Circle : Women in the Scientific Community by Harriet Zuckerman, Jonathan R. Cole, John T. Bruer
|
 |
|
Section contents:
Places to start
Pages of links
Miscellaneous
|
Places to start
- Women in science
issue of The Scientist
-
Women in Science articles from
Science Magazine's Nextwave site
- May 2000 Women
in Science
issue of Science's Nextwave site.
- Expanding the talent pool, a report from
HHMI called "Beyond Bio101". Also check out
Faculty in the crossfire, for a look at one woman's experience as an assistant professor.
-
Online articles about aspects of women in science. These are brief, and would make
good starting points for discussion. This site includes
links to other sites, with reviews.
-
Need inspiration? Gifts of Speech is an
unusual site "dedicated to preserving and creating access to speeches made by
influential contemporary women".
- The WICB columns,
from the Women in Cell Biology committee of the ASCB,
provide a variety of topics and points of view.
Other pages of links
Miscellaneous
- Athena was the grey-eyed goddess of wisdom, noted for her intelligence and reason--an appropriate symbol for women scientists! Learn more about Athena here. At times, Athena assumed the guise of Mentor, wise friend and advisor of Odysseus, and tutor of Telemachus.
- Column about this site in
HMS Beagle (requires free password)
- The Glass Ceiling Website offers a newsletter
called Shatter
-
Advancing Women
-
Women in technology including an
online museum
- A comprehensive directory of Women in Science and Technology emailing lists
- The Hypatia Institute, a "website for
gender equity in science", mostly physics.
-
Women's Connection Online
- Women in Science page with
miscellaneous information and links
-
Women in Science Page with discussions about
education
- Did you know
about these women?
-
Women's History, an online journal
-
WGICS:
Women and Genetics in Contemporary Society, addressing ethical and
social issues in genetics.
-
feminist.com, a gateway to women's issues
-
Women on the 'Net
-
Center for Research on Women
at Wellesley College has publications on
Math and Science Careers
-
Women's Studies/Women's Issues
Resource Sites "is a selective, alphabetical listing of web sites containing
resources and information about women's studies/women's issues, with an emphasis on
sites of particular use to an academic women's studies program."
-
US Dept of Labor Women's Bureau website. The HTML
may not render properly, and unfortunately it apparently has not been updated for a while.
Unfortunately, the current Administration has targeted this 75-year-old bureau, the only one
specifically concerned with working women's issues, for dissolution.
-
Women of Color Website
-
WTES: Women, Technology, Environment,
and Society
- Third wave feminism reflects "the unique view of women's issues and feminism in the generation of women who came of age in the 80's. You'll find historical information that you might not have known, discussion of politics, sexuality, daily life, sports and hobbies . . . and lots more!"
- Women in science and healthcare resource site from the NIH
|

|
|
|
Go to page 1(History, Education, Organizations)
Go to page 1a (Reports and Studies)
Go to page 2 (Careers)
Go to page 2a (Faculty issues)
Go to page 3 (Chilly climate)
Go to page 3a (Chilly climate in academe)
Go to page 3b (Personal life)
Go to page 4 (Books, Miscellaneous)
Go to index
© S. L. Forsburg.
Standard disclaimer: Any opinions are my own and do not represent the views of my employer.
|