Oh No He Didn't! Brilliant Women and the Men Who Took Credit for Their Work bookcover

Oh No He Didn't! Brilliant Women and the Men Who Took Credit for Their Work

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Description

Don't you hate it when someone takes credit for another person's idea? It happens a lot, and the people who lose out are often women. This book tells the stories of women whose inventions, discoveries, and creations were credited to men-women like Zelda Fitzgerald, the novelist, painter, and playwright who was more than F. Scott's wife, and Margaret Knight, who invented the flat-bottomed paper bag but saw the patent go to a man who stole off to the Patent Office with her idea. By telling the stories of the brilliant women artists, inventors, scientists, architects, and mathematicians who were denied their due, Oh No He Didn't! will help all women tackle obstacles and create a kinship of understanding that will inspire and transcend generations.

Product Details

PublisherCynren Press
Publish DateSeptember 24, 2024
Pages240
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconHardback
EAN/UPC9781947976436
Dimensions9.0 X 6.0 X 0.6 inches | 1.1 pounds

About the Author

Wendy J. Murphy is an attorney specializing in women's rights, civil rights, constitutional rights, and violence against women and children. Codirector of the Women's and Children's Advocacy Project under the Center for Law and Social Responsibility at New England Law Boston and a former Visiting Scholar at Harvard Law School, Wendy served as a columnist for the Boston Herald for many years and has appeared frequently on network and cable news shows as a pundit and legal analyst. Her first book, And Justice for Some (2007), is an exposé of injustices endured by women and children victims of abuse. Wendy, a former child abuse and sex crimes prosecutor, lectures widely on women's rights, Title IX, constitutional law, and criminal justice policy and is a national leader in the fight for the Equal Rights Amendment. A mother of five, a grandmother of one, and a yoga student for life, Wendy lives outside Boston.

Reviews

Murphy, an attorney specializing in women's rights and violence against women and children, focuses her book on innovative and genius women throughout history and the men who took credit for their contributions to physics, astronomy, economics, the arts, and architecture. Utilizing archival material and other research, her book profiles many of these women. Her list includes Eunice Foote, who was the first to demonstrate the greenhouse effect; novelist/painter Zelda Fitzgerald, whose own husband, F. Scott Fitzgerald, put her words in his books; and so many others. Murphy draws from her own personal experiences too; a professor and then a student plagiarized her work. She writes with a jaded, edgy humor, with chapter titles like "A Woman Discovered Nuclear Fusion; a Man Got Her Prize" and "A Woman Invented Monopoly to Discourage Greed, Then a Greedy Man Stole It." Her writing style is bold and relatable without sacrificing historical accuracy or seriousness. Each chapter ends with references to resources for further reading. This exceptional book's stories of plagiarism showcase persistence and the insidious and enduring ways in which sexism informs and shapes the contemporary world. Murphy will motivate readers to challenge stereotypes.

-Library Journal


I see the spirit of my great-great-grandmother Elizabeth Cady Stanton in all these women, and I hear her voice in the words of Wendy Murphy not only in this book but in her tireless fight for the Equal Rights Amendment. Her leadership, brilliance, and fierce refusal to compromise or accept less than full equality for women are unrivaled. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Alice Paul are so proud as we stand on their shoulders.

-Coline Jenkins, great-great-granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton


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