Numbers and Narratives

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18th century
19th century
A01=Maria Tamboukou
archival research
archival research methods
Augusta Ada Lovelace
Author_Maria Tamboukou
automathographies
barriers
biographical accounts
Category=GPS
Category=GTM
Category=JBCC
Category=JBSF1
Category=JBSF11
Category=JHB
Category=JNAM
Category=NHAH
Category=PBB
digital turn
Emilie Du Chatelet
epistemology
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
exclusion
feminist
feminist epistemology
feminist mathematics historiography
gender studies
genealogy
Hannah Arendt
historiography of science
knowledge politics
letters
love
Maria Gaetana Agnesi
Marie-Sophie Germaine
Mary Fairfax Somerville
mathematics
memory
methodology
numbers
philosophy
process philosophy
social sciences
sociology
Sofia Kovalevskaya
Sophie Germain
women in STEM history
women mathematicians
women philosophers

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032743257
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Sep 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Why have there been so few women mathematicians? This book does not seek an answer in absence but in the forces, ruptures, and intensities that shape the becoming of a femme philosophe—a mathematician, scientist, and philosopher—within the shifting assemblages of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Europe. Moving beyond exclusion as mere negation, it traces the conditions of emergence, the differential speeds and slippages through which women entered, inhabited, and transformed the mathematical sciences.

Drawing on auto/biographical documents, literary and philosophical writings, and the materialities of the archive, this book approaches the digital turn not as a tool but as a plane of composition, where new trajectories of memory work unfold. Between historiography and fabulation, it maps a space where women’s mathematical thought was not only possible but inevitable—if only in flashes, excesses, and détours.

This book will resonate with scholars in the sociology, history, and philosophy of science and mathematics, particularly those engaged with feminist thought, the politics of knowledge, and experimental archival methods.

Maria Tamboukou is Professor of Feminist Studies at the University of East London and Leverhulme Major Research Fellow (2022-5). She has held academic positions in a number of international institutions, including the ‘Hannah Arendt’ Centre for Political Studies at the University of Verona, Italy. Her research activity develops in the areas of philosophies and epistemologies in the social sciences, feminist theories, narrative analytics, and archival research. She has published in English, Greek, and French, and her work has been translated in Italian, Norwegian, Portuguese, Spanish, Welsh, and Greek. She is the author of nine monographs, two co-authored books, and four edited volumes on research methods, including her latest monograph, Epistolary Narratives of Love, Gender and Agonistic Politics in 2023. Writing histories of the present is the central focus of her work, currently configured as an assemblage of feminist genealogies.

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