WOMEN WHO HAVE
WON NOBEL PRIZES
G'day folks,
I think you will find this very interesting. I sure did. As a male, I've always been a great advocate for women, kids, and those who cannot stand up for themselves, for whatever reason. You may ask why? Well, it's easy. I was brought up in a tough environment, and I still recall what my mother went through at the expense of my father who came back from the war a total mess. Fortunately, I turned a negative situation into a positive life experience. Having said that, let me highlight some women who have been rewarded for great work.
When it comes
to record-setting Nobel Prize recipients, there’s Marie Curie and there’s
everyone else. The Polish-French scientist was the first woman to share a Nobel
Prize (the 1903 physics award, with her husband Pierre and fellow French
scientist Henri Becquerel, for their pioneering work on radioactivity) and was
also the first woman to receive an unshared Nobel, the 1911 chemistry prize,
for her discovery of the elements radium and polonium. That makes her the only
person ever to win Nobel Prizes in two different sciences. As if that weren’t
enough, four of her family members are also Nobel laureates. In addition to
Pierre, her daughter and son-in-law shared the 1935 chemistry prize, while
another son-in-law was the director of UNICEF when it won the 1965 peace prize.
The first
woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize was Baroness Bertha Sophie Felicita von
Suttner, née Countess Kinsky von Chinic und Tettau, who won in 1905. Von Sutter
was the author of an influential anti-war novel and had a leading role in
convincing dynamite magnate Alfred Nobel to include a peace prize in his
bequest. The first female Nobel literature laureate was novelist Selma
Lagerlöf, whose most popular book was about a boy who flies around Sweden on
the back of a goose. The first woman to win the Nobel Prize for Physiology or
Medicine was Gerty Theresa Cori, who shared the 1947 award for discovering how
sugar-derived glycogen is used by the body as an energy source.
The last first
woman to win the Nobel in her category was Elinor Ostrom, who shared the 2009
economics prize for her groundbreaking analysis of common property. The wait
was so long for a woman economics laureate in part because that prize wasn’t
established until 1969. In all, as of 2013, Nobel Prizes have been awarded to
44 different women.
Clancy's comment: You go, girls. Love ya work!
I'm ...
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