Stereotypes about attractiveness and androgyny still hold back the progress of women in the sciences and mathematics, a scholar has argued.
Eva?Maria Kaufholz, a PhD student at Johannes Gutenberg University of Mainz, has traced these stereotypes back to literature on the?Russian mathematician Sofia Kovalevskaya (1850-91), the first woman?to obtain a full professorship in Northern Europe.
Early biographers claimed that Kovalevskaya*s achievements were partly spurred on by her jealousy of a more attractive sister or that her allegedly androgynous looks reflected the fact that, by excelling in mathematics, she had broken down a ※natural barrier§ between the sexes.
Later writers, keen to present her as a role model, assured their readers that the professor at what is now Stockholm University was ※the full package§ and ※the best-looking mathematician of either sex§.
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Ms Kaufholz said that similar stereotypes can still be found. Examples were pink ※I*m too pretty to do maths§ T-shirts and the online comments when the late Maryam Mirzakhani became the first woman to win the Fields Medal in 2014 (※Congrats! She*s very beautiful§ and ※That*s a female? She has more testosterone than I do§). Equally pernicious was the continuing ※gender bias in the attribution of creativity§, based on the age-old assumption that women can be competent scientists but never truly creative.
The stress on looks and androgyny, however, had also led to what Ms Kaufholz described as ※a counter-movement assuring us that even female mathematicians and scientists can be sexy§. She cited Marie No?lle*s 2016 film?Marie Curie: The Courage of Knowledge,?in which the Nobel prizewinner 每 described by one reviewer as ※so hot, she*s radioactive§ 每 devotes most of her time and energy to a passionate affair with a married man.
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Although Ms Kaufholz acknowledged that such portrayals ※have feminist interests at heart and want to show that you don*t have to be ugly to be a mathematician§, she was opposed to their continuing stress on ※body consciousness§ rather than achievement. Presenting her research at Imperial College London earlier this month, she ended her talk with a montage of photographs showing colleagues of many different shapes and sizes in order to demonstrate that ※being a female mathematician is not connected with the way you look or present yourself§.
※You wouldn*t have a movie where Albert Einstein is chopping wood so we are sure he*s a man,§ Ms Kaufholz pointed out. ※Nobody has ever considered that to be necessary. But we need to assure viewer that [female scientists] are women. And that can only done in a sexual way.§
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