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Trafficking Materials and Gendered Experimental Practices:
Radium Research in Early 20th Century Vienna
by Maria Rentetzi
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Biography of a Trafficking Material
2. Designing (for) a New Scientific Discipline
3. Gender, Science, and the City
4. The Institute for Radium Research in Red Vienna
5. From Cambridge to Vienna: The Scintillation Counter in Female Hands
6. The Aftermath of the Cambridge-Vienna Controversy: Radioactivity and Politics in Vienna in the 1930s
7. Marietta Blau on the Margins of Nuclear and Particle Physics
Bibliography
Media Index
Gutenberg<e>
© 2007 Columbia University Press
Media Index
>> Chapter 4
Media Index
Chapter 4
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Tables
Table 01/4:
Enrollment of female and male students, University of Vienna, 1918–1934
Table 02/4:
Number of women enrolled in the philosophical faculty of the University of Vienna by field, 1918–1934
Table 03/4:
Professional and career information of the director and the assistants of the institute, 1919–1938
Table 04/4:
Researchers who remained at the Radium Institute for longer than four years from the academic year 1919/20 to 1933/34
Table 05/4:
Number of publications of those researchers who published more than ten papers from 1920 to 1934
Table 06/4:
Collaborations at the Institute for Radium Research, 1920–1934
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