Integrating Women Into the Astronaut Corps: Politics and Logistics at NASA, 1972–2004

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JHU Press, 2011 - Biography & Autobiography - 207 pages

Why, Amy E. Foster asks, did it take two decades after the Soviet Union launched its first female cosmonaut for the United States to send its first female astronaut into space? In answering this question, Foster recounts the complicated history of integrating women into NASA’s astronaut corps.

NASA selected its first six female astronauts in 1978. Foster examines the political, technological, and cultural challenges that the agency had to overcome to usher in this new era in spaceflight. She shows how NASA had long developed progressive hiring policies but was limited in executing them by a national agenda to beat the Soviets to the moon, budget constraints, and cultural ideas about women’s roles in America.

Lively writing and compelling stories, including personal interviews with America’s first women astronauts, propel Foster’s account. Through extensive archival research, Foster also examines NASA’s directives about sexual discrimination, the technological issues in integrating women into the corps, and the popular media’s discussion of women in space. Foster puts together a truly original study of the experiences not only of early women astronauts but also of the managers and engineers who helped launch them into space.

In documenting these events, Foster offers a broader understanding of the difficulties in sexually integrating any workplace, even when the organization approaches the situation with as positive an outlook and as strong a motivation as did NASA.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
1 Beyond Rosie the Riveter
8
2 Wilma Deering Meets Captain Janeway
23
3 The Damn Crazy Things
46
4 Making Space
67
Illustrations
87
5 The Strange Ones
87
6 Defying Gravity
106
7 NASA Sutra
129
8 Uninvited Heroics
142
Epilogue
153
Notes
161
Essay on Sources
193
Index
199
Copyright

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About the author (2011)

Amy E. Foster is an associate professor of history at the University of Central Florida.