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The Center for Research on Women presents: Woman: An Intimate Geography with author and journalist Natalie Angier

March 15, 2000, New York, N.Y.Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Natalie Angier reads from and discusses her most recent book, Woman: An Intimate Geography, on Wednesday, April 5. In Woman, Angier, who writes about biology for The New York Times, has undertaken a landmark examination of female physiology, drawing on science, medicine, art, mythology, history and literature.

The talk, originally slated for February, was rescheduled after being postponed because of illness.

 

The New York Times hailed Woman as "…dazzling…What you’ll see through her eyes will startle and amaze you." The Boston Globe said the book is "intimate and idiosyncratic…dismantles the misogynist mythologies once advanced as the scientific gospel of the female body…Angier’s brilliant and witty fantasia will inspire women to believe in their powers." People selected Woman as "The Book of the Week" and noted: "Natalie Angier has that rare dual talent: a true passion for science combined with a poet’s linguistic flair. In this lively dissection of womanhood, she places everything from estrogen to the politics of motherhood beneath her flawlessly focused microscope, offering innumerable tidbits both surprising and fascinating."

In her foreword, Angier writes, "The female body has been abominably regarded over the centuries. It has been made too much of or utterly ignored. Many of the current stories of the innately feminine are so impoverished, incomplete, and inaccurate, so remarkably free of real proof, that they simply do not ring true, not for me and not, I suspect, for many other women . . . I believe that we can learn from other species, and from our pasts, and from our parts, which is why I wrote this book as a kind of scientific fantasia of womanhood."

The talk is part of the Helen Rogers Reid Lectureship, a forum that honors distinguished women in public life and the arts who have shown significant commitment to improving the lives of all women. Angier is Barnard graduate and currently a science writer for the New York Times. She is also the author of several other books, including widely acclaimed Natural Obsessions and The Beauty of the Beastly.

What: A reading and discussion with Natalie Angier

When: Wednesday, April 5, 2000

When: 6:30 - 8:00 PM

Where: Barnard College, Julius S. Held Lecture Hall

For more information call 212-854-2067

Contact: Janet Jacobsen, The Center of Research on Women, 212-854-2067; Petra Tuomi, Associate Director of Public Affairs 212-854-7907

 

 

 

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