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Women in Industrial Research.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublication details: Stuttgart : Franz Steiner Verlag, 2014.Description: 1 online resource (278 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 351510688X
  • 9783515106887
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Women in Industrial Research.DDC classification:
  • 331.4094
LOC classification:
  • HD6134
Online resources:
Contents:
Foreword; contents; list of tables; list of figures; editors' preface; introduction; women researchers in industrial laboratories: trends and perspectives; part i: links between academic and non-academic professions; 1 women scientists with different laboratory practices: transitioning from the kaiser wilhelm society to industrial laboratories, and vice versa; 2 collaboration and competition between academia and industry: hedwig kohn and osram, 1916-1938; 3 the background and career of angeliki panagiotatou: the first female physician in greece to hold a ph.d.
Part ii: the electrical engineering industry4 lillian gilbreth and irene witte -- women of efficiency; 5 female scientists at german electrical engineering corporations and their patronage relationships; 6 from the german electrical engineering industry to the united states: the case of cecilie froehlich; part iii: the chemical, cosmetics, and nuclear industries; 7 women in the chemical industry in the first half of the 20th century; 8 creating a niche for women in the cosmetics industry; 9 dora i. leipunskaya and the contributions of women to the nuclear industry.
Part iv: optical companies and institutions for applied optics10 women academics and industrial researchers in thuringia during the early twentieth century; 11 maria f. romanova and her research on applied optics in russia and germany; 12 female employees at carl zeiss-jena during the 1960s and 1970s; 13 designing and building planetariums for the carl zeiss corporation: an architect tells her story; index of names; notes on contributors.
Summary: This e-book presents new research on women scientists who enjoyed careers at industrial corporations during the first seven decades of the twentieth century. What positions were they able to achieve? What was the relationship between academic and industrial research? How open were certain industrial sectors - the electrical, chemical, cosmetic, nuclear, and optical sectors in particular - to hiring female researchers? Were women working in certain industries better able to acquire patents than those in others? What role did patronage play at the time? How did political turmoil affect women''s.
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Print version record.

Foreword; contents; list of tables; list of figures; editors' preface; introduction; women researchers in industrial laboratories: trends and perspectives; part i: links between academic and non-academic professions; 1 women scientists with different laboratory practices: transitioning from the kaiser wilhelm society to industrial laboratories, and vice versa; 2 collaboration and competition between academia and industry: hedwig kohn and osram, 1916-1938; 3 the background and career of angeliki panagiotatou: the first female physician in greece to hold a ph.d.

Part ii: the electrical engineering industry4 lillian gilbreth and irene witte -- women of efficiency; 5 female scientists at german electrical engineering corporations and their patronage relationships; 6 from the german electrical engineering industry to the united states: the case of cecilie froehlich; part iii: the chemical, cosmetics, and nuclear industries; 7 women in the chemical industry in the first half of the 20th century; 8 creating a niche for women in the cosmetics industry; 9 dora i. leipunskaya and the contributions of women to the nuclear industry.

Part iv: optical companies and institutions for applied optics10 women academics and industrial researchers in thuringia during the early twentieth century; 11 maria f. romanova and her research on applied optics in russia and germany; 12 female employees at carl zeiss-jena during the 1960s and 1970s; 13 designing and building planetariums for the carl zeiss corporation: an architect tells her story; index of names; notes on contributors.

This e-book presents new research on women scientists who enjoyed careers at industrial corporations during the first seven decades of the twentieth century. What positions were they able to achieve? What was the relationship between academic and industrial research? How open were certain industrial sectors - the electrical, chemical, cosmetic, nuclear, and optical sectors in particular - to hiring female researchers? Were women working in certain industries better able to acquire patents than those in others? What role did patronage play at the time? How did political turmoil affect women''s.

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