The untold story of the woman who helped to make one of humanity's greatest discoveries -- DNA -- but who was never given credit for doing so. 'Our dark lady is leaving us next week.' On 7 March 1953 Maurice Wilkins of King's College, London, wrote to Francis Crick at the Cavendish laboratories in Cambridge to say that as soon as his obstructive female colleague was gone from King's, he, Crick, and James Watson, a young American working with Crick, could go full speed ahead with solving the structure of the DNA molecule that lies in every gene. Not long after, the pair whose names will be forever linked announced to the world that they had discovered the secret of life. But could Crick and Watson have done it without the 'dark lady'? In two years at King's, Franklin had made major contributions to the understanding of DNA. She established its existence in two forms, she worked out the position of the phosphorous atoms in its backbone. Most crucially, using X-ray techniques that may have contributed significantly to her later death from cancer at the tragically young age of thirty-seven, she had taken beautiful photographs of the patterns of DNA. This is the extraordinarily powerful story of Rosalind Franklin, told by one of our greatest biographers; the single-minded young scientist whose contribution to arguably the most significant discovery of all time went unrecognised, elbowed aside in the rush for glory, and who died too young to recover her claim to some of that reputation, a woman who was not the wife of anybody and who is a myth in the making. Like a medieval saint, Franklin looms larger as she recedes in time. She has become a feminist icon, the Sylvia Plath of molecular biology. This will be a full and balanced biography, that will examine Franklin's abruptness and tempestuousness, her loneliness and her relationships, the powerful family from which she sprang and the uniqueness of the work in which she was engaged. It is a vivid portrait, in sum, of a gifted young woman drawn against a background of women's education, Anglo-Jewry and the greatest scientific discovery of the century.
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看完double helix之後,我對DNA的故事産生瞭興趣。又追著看瞭這本彆人位rosalind franklin正名的傳記。 franklin 是個extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科學傢。 一心撲在科研上,個人生活非常平淡。最後年紀輕輕就癌癥去世也可能是因為常年放射expousre。可惜 watson的書把她形容成腦子不聰明,脾氣古怪不閤作,double helix一舉成名,從此franklin這個反麵形象就深入人心瞭。
评分看完double helix之後,我對DNA的故事産生瞭興趣。又追著看瞭這本彆人位rosalind franklin正名的傳記。 franklin 是個extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科學傢。 一心撲在科研上,個人生活非常平淡。最後年紀輕輕就癌癥去世也可能是因為常年放射expousre。可惜 watson的書把她形容成腦子不聰明,脾氣古怪不閤作,double helix一舉成名,從此franklin這個反麵形象就深入人心瞭。
评分看完double helix之後,我對DNA的故事産生瞭興趣。又追著看瞭這本彆人位rosalind franklin正名的傳記。 franklin 是個extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科學傢。 一心撲在科研上,個人生活非常平淡。最後年紀輕輕就癌癥去世也可能是因為常年放射expousre。可惜 watson的書把她形容成腦子不聰明,脾氣古怪不閤作,double helix一舉成名,從此franklin這個反麵形象就深入人心瞭。
评分看完double helix之後,我對DNA的故事産生瞭興趣。又追著看瞭這本彆人位rosalind franklin正名的傳記。 franklin 是個extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科學傢。 一心撲在科研上,個人生活非常平淡。最後年紀輕輕就癌癥去世也可能是因為常年放射expousre。可惜 watson的書把她形容成腦子不聰明,脾氣古怪不閤作,double helix一舉成名,從此franklin這個反麵形象就深入人心瞭。
评分看完double helix之後,我對DNA的故事産生瞭興趣。又追著看瞭這本彆人位rosalind franklin正名的傳記。 franklin 是個extremely hardworking & well published (talking about Nature, Science here) 的科學傢。 一心撲在科研上,個人生活非常平淡。最後年紀輕輕就癌癥去世也可能是因為常年放射expousre。可惜 watson的書把她形容成腦子不聰明,脾氣古怪不閤作,double helix一舉成名,從此franklin這個反麵形象就深入人心瞭。
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