Fr. 116.00

The Retrieval of a Legacy - Nineteenth-Century American Women Inventors

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

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Throughout the 19th century, women inventors developed significant technologies, yet, because of complex cultural barriers and the pervasive image of the inventor as male, their technological contributions have until now been ignored and undervalued. This study, the first to focus exclusively on 19th-century women, explores the fascinating relationship between women and technology. According to a government census, there were nearly 5,000 patents awarded to women between 1790 and 1888; further, many women invented significant technologies but never received a patent. The individual and collective experiences of these women reveal both why gendered assumptions about women and technology persist and why they are assumptions, not reality.

Women invented such things as the first ice cream freezer, a pyrotechnic signal flare used extensively by the U.S. Navy, a reservoir and dam system adopted by the state of California, and more. Still, names such as Nancy Johnson, Martha Coston, and Harriet Strong are not recognized as part of the history of American technology. It was not the lack of technological ability or creativity that prevented women inventors from full participation in technological advancement. Rather educational access, legal enfranchisement, property rights, gendered standards of professionalization, and sexual division of labor constructed discriminatory barriers, limiting women's relationship with technology.

List of contents










Introduction
The U.S. Patent System: A Framework of Legal Barriers
Out of the Revolution: Seeds of Independent Invention
Jacksonian Democracy: Yankee Ingenuity and the Self-Made Women?
The Civil War: Impetus to Inventing Women
National Reconstruction vs. Gender Construction
American Progress: Celebrated Or Relegated?
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index


About the author










DENISE E. PILATO is an Assistant Professor of Science and Technology Studies at Eastern Michigan University./e Her teaching and research focus on historical patterns that explore the relationship between gender and technology.

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