Dynamos and Virgins Revisited

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A01=Martha Moore Trescott
Author_Martha Moore Trescott
Category=PDR
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780810848917
  • Weight: 372g
  • Dimensions: 122 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 1979
  • Publisher: Scarecrow Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Dynamos and Virgins Revisited: Women and Technological Change in History, first published by Scarecrow Press in 1979, was one of the first books published on the history of women and technology and laid the groundwork for decades of impressive and increasing scholarship in this field. An edited collection of eleven essays based on scholarly research, it explores many of the ways women have affected technological change historically and how technology has impinged on them. Both European and American topics, from the eighteenth century into the twentieth, are included, although the United States in the last 100 years is the focus.

The book is divided into two main sections, each subdivided with introductions. The first covers "women as active participants in technological change" and contains essays on women industrial workers, inventors, and scientists. The second section views "effects of technological change on women in the domestic spheres", covering women as homemakers, bearers, and rearers of children.

Today, with the renewed interest in women's contributions in all fields, including science, engineering, and technology, women's history, and women's and gender studies programs, this paperback edition will certainly continue to be a very useful and now more affordable reference work for students and individual scholars, as well as university, school, and public libraries.

Martha Moore Trescott has been a research associate in the College of Engineering at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, a professor of history and director of campus ministry at Marycrest University in Davenport, Iowa, and an adjunct professor in history and in social issues in technology at DeVry University, Dallas, Texas. She is the author of numerous papers, articles and essays in books and journals on the history of women and technology, and is currently doing research and writing in the history of women and technology in both Dallas and Fayetteville, Arkansas.

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