Hidden Figures: The American Dream and the Untold Story of the Black Women Mathematicians Who Helped Win the Space Race
L**.
A very encouraging book
The women of this book, black and white, were never actually ‘hidden.’ There was no conspiracy to cover up the fact that they had worked at the laboratory or the other entities that it morphed into over the years. But as is the case with lower level employees of almost any organization, no great fanfare was made about them either. So, we owe Margot Lee Shetterly for unearthing their story and sharing it with us.In 1943 the Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory was suffering from a shortage of qualified personnel to fill such positions as Junior Physicist, Mathematician, and Assistant Computer. The demands of the military for young men for World War II took up so many young men that the people in charge of the laboratory found themselves looking for women – even black women – who could do these jobs.In those days a ‘computer’ was a person who operated a calculating machine (an older, clunkier and mostly mechanical version of a calculator) to perform the calculations needed to make sense of the research being done at the laboratory.In 1943 they began to hire some exceptionally talented and mathematically inclined black women. Many of these women had been teaching school. Some had been teaching at the college level. The mission of the laboratory at that time was to study things like airflow over the bodies of different types of airplanes trying to discover how to increase the efficiency of different parts of the plane. The engineers studied these problems in wind tunnels and sent the data they collected to the computers for analysis. Throughout the war, these women helped to provide the solutions that allowed for the creation of ever more efficient airplanes, and in the process proved their worth to the laboratory.At the end of the war, there was a change in the mission of the laboratory, and some of the people who had started there during the war left for various reasons, but there was still plenty to do. Now the focus was on designing and testing improved airplanes and airplane parts for civilian use. The move from propeller planes to jets and the quest for supersonic flight was assisted by these same women.Sometime in the late ‘fifties, the mission began to change again, and so did the way computers did their work. The focus now began to be on winning the space race, and the Russian launch of their satellite, Sputnik, inspired a big push to build rockets and send a man into space, with the ultimate goal being to put a man on the moon. Electronic computers began to replace the human computers, but they needed somebody to program them, and at that time there were no schools already set up to train computer programmers. The National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), which was rapidly becoming the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) set up classes for their own people to train them on how to use the new electronic computers, and many of the women computers signed up to take the classes so they could continue to do their jobs. Meanwhile, some of the women had already made the transition to becoming Mathematicians and Engineers and kept right on solving the problems and checking the data that allowed for the success of the Mercury and Gemini missions, and finally sent several Apollo missions to the moon.While all this was going on, changes were also happening in the world outside the laboratory. When the women first came to Langley, segregation was still in full swing in Virginia. When they rode the bus to work, they had to ride in the back of the bus. There were separate restrooms for black women. The schools their children went to were still segregated. Whole housing areas had to be built for them alongside the housing areas being built for whites.The military and the federal government were some of the earliest workplaces to become integrated. By small steps (like removing the sign in the lunchroom designating the separate table for them) and larger steps (finally getting rid of the separate restrooms), they gradually made the workplace more hospitable. Much was owed to the fact that many of the people they worked with were from places outside the South and were less hostile to black people. Much was also due to the fact that the women did their jobs well and respected and were respected by their coworkers.In the outside world, things went more slowly. Eventually, the segregated schools and buses became things of the past. It became possible to move into areas that had not been built specifically for blacks.
V**B
This is one of the best books you can read for all time.
This is one of the best books you can read for education in the historical and cultural story of NASA BEFORE it was NASA, the engineering community, and the civil rights era. The engineering is incredible, and the insights into the black community over time is invaluable, and gave me more respect than I already had for what these families have had to go through since even before the civil rights movement even began and beyond it. MOST HIGHLY recommended.
M**X
Highly Recommend!
Hidden Figures was truly a heroic novel about the women of NASA who went unrecognized for their tremendous efforts towards air exploration and travel. I have mixed views on this novel, but I think it should be read widely amongst African American children, teens, and young adults as it is an inspiring story about hardworking people who sought to become more than what society duped them to be because of their race. This novel is empowering and is a good read in my eyes. The way Shetterly can educate the reader on the social issues during the 20th century and display its impact on African Americans through specific characters is very impressive, yet trivial.As it is a groundbreaking novel, it does have some cons. The piece was a bit too heavy to read because the author tries to focus on so many aspects during this period. She makes so many references towards history, the book starts to become a history book in a sense, but it is essentially a book about history. That was a difficult concept for me to grasp as I read and wrote an assignment on it. Shetterly, unfortunately, bites off more than can chew as she switches from characters while trying to include historical events. Her constant back-and-forth methods made it difficult for me to interpret what was happening at some moments. She did pull it off, but the transitions made be harder for others. I feel like she tried to fit too much information into a small frame. She elaborated on Jim Crow, Brown vs. The Board of Education, World War 2, the space race, and many other events in only 265 pages, so the plot had some holes and was convoluted. Some characters like young Christine were irrelevant to the plot and I saw no significance in those people. Another reference was the woman from Star Trek and her story, which I thought was not important to the plot. Shetterly’s depiction of African American men and women in racist America was so puissant, I do not think she needed to include some small pieces like the ones I mentioned.On the other hand, her ability to captivate the character’s emotions through text was incredible. An example would be Mary Jackson’s predicament with the bathroom and her journey to become an engineer at NASA. She moves the audience through her distressful tone as she illustrates the struggle the women at NASA and African Americans faced while trying to avoid being devoured by the country that prayed on their downfall as racism still lingered. African Americans often felt “angry and humiliated” because of the treatment they faced as “negotiating racial boundaries had become a daily fact of negro life.” (Shetterly 108) Shetterly’s novel gave an insider’s look at the status of African Americans in America during the 20th century. They were caught in a crossfire as the country relied on them to fight in WW2, which was a war against racism, but wouldn’t call it upon themselves to solve the racial problems in their own country. “America’s inadequacy” and hypocrisy came to the forefront with the lives of Dorothy, Katherine, and Mary being emphasized. (Shetterly, 152) These individuals were part of a black movement of individuals who sacrificed everything they had to become more than their color. America asked so much of these people but gave them nothing. Shetterly beautifully elicits the power that African Americans had in the workforce that America bothers to show or care about and this is why I believe this piece is worth reading.This book was different because it displayed success in many different ways instead of one. This is what demonstrates black excellence at its finest. Given that this book was a little too heavy and convoluted in the plot, I would give it 4 out of 5 stars. It goes to show that black voices can be heard no matter the predicaments we face. In a stagnant country, we will prosper. These successful women “mirrored the aspirations and philosophy of the surrounding black community” and that is why this novel should be read by others seeking to become pioneers of a new age of black progression. (Shetterly,95)
R**A
A revelation on the times and conditions
A true page-turner about those behind the scenes that made all the difference in the infancy of the space industry. Well woven and shaped by some brilliant minds and steadfast characters.
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