Article ID: CBB620043585

Do Microscopes Have Politics? Gendering the Electron Microscope in Laboratory Biological Research (October 2023)

unapi

Objects like microscopes are gendered depending on their context. The introduction of the electron microscope at Leeds University in early 1940s Britain was under the control of high-status physicists, most of whom were men, who regulated its access over and against biologists. Moreover, the microscope required physical strength more associated with men than women, combined with a sound knowledge of physics. This article explores the challenges women encountered including access to scientific instruments when entering post–World War II electron microscopy through Irene Manton's career. It combines techno-political and gendered perspectives on the history of women in science. In particular, the study invites gendered understanding of early biological electron microscopy, at a university world-renowned on the subject, through the lens of one capital intensive microscope.

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Authors & Contributors
Helvoort, Ton van
Delft, Dirk van
Gorkom, John van
Almeida, Adriana Mortara
Andrews, Elizabeth B.
Ayres, Peter G.
Journals
Ambix: Journal of the Society for the History of Alchemy and Chemistry
Advances in Imaging and Electron Physics
Annals of Science: The History of Science and Technology
Berichte zur Wissenschaftsgeschichte
Bulletin of the Scientific Instrument Society
Feministische Studien
Publishers
Harwood Academic Publishers
Prometheus
Routledge
Springer Nature
Concepts
Scientific apparatus and instruments
Microscopes, electron
Science and gender
Women in science
Laboratories
Microscopy
People
Curie, Marie Sklodowska
Ruska, Ernst
Boyle, Robert
Plot, Robert
Bodo von Borries
Time Periods
20th century, early
20th century
20th century, late
17th century
19th century
Places
France
Great Britain
Germany
Greece
United States
Brazil
Institutions
Siemens
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford
Siemens AG
Women's Engineering Society
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