Lecturas recomendadas
Fara, Patricia. Pandora’s Breeches: Women, Science and Power in the Enlightenment. London: Pimlico; 2004
Sutton, George. Science for a Polite Society. Gender, Culture and the Demonstration of Enlightenment. Boulder: Westview Press; 1995.
Golinski, J. Science as Public Culture: Chemistry and Enlightenment in Britain, 1760-1820, Cambridge, University Press; 1992
Estudios
Harding, Sandra, Sciences from Below: Feminisms, Postcolonialities and Modernities, Durham (USA) and London, Duke University Press, 2008
Kawashima K. The Evolution of the Gender Question in the Study of Madame Lavoisier. HistoriaScientiarum, 2013; 23(1): 24-37
Mazzotti, Massimo ‘Newton for Ladies: Gentility, Gender and Radical Culture’, British Journal for the History of Science, 2004; 37(33): 119–146
Neelam Kumar (ed.) Gender and Science: Studies across Cultures, New Delhi: Cambridge University Press India, 2012.
Rossiter, Margaret W. “The Matthew/Matilda Effect in Science”, Social Studies of Science. 1993; 23(2) 325–341
Serrano, E. “Chemistry in the city: the scientific role of female societies in late eighteenth-century Madrid”. Ambix. 2013; 60(2): 139-159.
Suay-Matallana Ignacio, Bertomeu-Sánchez, José Ramón, François Bienvenue y la popularización científica en la Ilustración demostraciones experimentales, entretenimiento y públicos de la ciencia, Enseñanza de las ciencias, 2016; 34 (2): 167-184
Schiebinger, Londa, The Mind Has No Sex? Women in the Origins of Modern Science, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1991
Poirier, Jean-Pierre. La science et l’amour: Madame Lavoisier. Paris, Pygmalion; 2004
Watts, Ruth. Women in Science: A Social and Cultural History. London: Routledge; 2007.
Fuentes
Diario de Madrid, 19 de julio de 1797, página 1. Disponible en este enlace.
Páginas de internet y otros recursos
Science and Society Picture Library. Disponible en este enlace.
Panopticon Lavoisier. Disponible en este enlace.