Ovaries And Oddities

Albert Einstein’s Wife Was Smarter Than Him

19 min · I går
episode Albert Einstein’s Wife Was Smarter Than Him cover

Beskrivelse

Was Albert Einstein’s wife smarter than him? Did history erase yet another brilliant woman standing beside a famous man? In this episode of Ovaries and Oddities, we’re diving into the infuriating history of women whose work was ignored, minimized, stolen, or credited to men. From Mileva Marić, Albert Einstein’s first wife and intellectual partner, to Rosalind Franklin’s crucial role in uncovering the structure of DNA, Lise Meitner’s overlooked contribution to nuclear fission, and Margaret Keane’s husband literally pretending to paint her famous artwork. This episode is about the audacity of men and the women history tried to erase. Until next week, Ivanna Brookes In this episode: Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić Rosalind Franklin and Photo 51 Lise Meitner and nuclear fission Margaret Keane and the Big Eyes paintings The Matilda Effect Follow Ovaries and Oddities for more dark history, medical horror, and historical true crime. More of the podcast: Linktr.ee/ovariesandoddities

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av Ovaries And Oddities sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

60 Episoder

episode Albert Einstein’s Wife Was Smarter Than Him cover

Albert Einstein’s Wife Was Smarter Than Him

Was Albert Einstein’s wife smarter than him? Did history erase yet another brilliant woman standing beside a famous man? In this episode of Ovaries and Oddities, we’re diving into the infuriating history of women whose work was ignored, minimized, stolen, or credited to men. From Mileva Marić, Albert Einstein’s first wife and intellectual partner, to Rosalind Franklin’s crucial role in uncovering the structure of DNA, Lise Meitner’s overlooked contribution to nuclear fission, and Margaret Keane’s husband literally pretending to paint her famous artwork. This episode is about the audacity of men and the women history tried to erase. Until next week, Ivanna Brookes In this episode: Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić Rosalind Franklin and Photo 51 Lise Meitner and nuclear fission Margaret Keane and the Big Eyes paintings The Matilda Effect Follow Ovaries and Oddities for more dark history, medical horror, and historical true crime. More of the podcast: Linktr.ee/ovariesandoddities

I går19 min
episode God Killed 33% of Europe To Raise Minimum Wage cover

God Killed 33% of Europe To Raise Minimum Wage

Checkout Instagram & Facebook for daily content @ OvariesAndOddities 12 ships docked in Sicily but most of the sailors were dead. Over the next 5 years between 20-50 million people died of this mysterious plague. Waking up with a fever where your skin is burning, your body is shaking, your head feels like it’s splitting open, and then all of your lymph nodes are the size of eggs. Within days, that lump could turn black. Your fingers, toes, lips, or nose could darken. And in medieval Europe, there was no urgent care or antibiotics. So today we’re talking about the Black Death See you next week, Ivanna Brookes 🖤 More of Ovaries And Oddities: Linktr.ee/ovariesandoddities black death, bubonic plague, medieval history, medical horror, dark history, plague doctor, history podcast

28. mai 202614 min
episode Victorians Slept in Coffins & Ate Poison on Purpose cover

Victorians Slept in Coffins & Ate Poison on Purpose

In this episode of Ovaries & Oddities, we’re diving into the horrors of Victorian London, from arsenic wallpaper and poisonous beauty products to deadly sewage, contaminated drinking water, cholera outbreaks, overcrowded streets, workhouses, doss houses, the four-penny coffin, and the infamous two-penny hangover. The Victorian era gave us some of the most iconic aesthetics in history, but behind the pretty dresses and gothic architecture was a city filled with poverty, disease, pollution, human waste, toxic products, and social systems that punished people simply for being poor. See you next Thursday, Ivanna Brookes Victorian London, Victorian era, dark history, arsenic wallpaper, Scheele’s Green, Paris Green, Victorian beauty standards, Victorian poverty, workhouses, doss houses, two penny hangover, four penny coffin, cholera, Great Stink, River Thames, John Snow cholera, Broad Street pump, Joseph Bazalgette, Victorian sanitation, medical horror, historical horror, Ovaries and Oddities

21. mai 202617 min