Marie Curie — "I have tried to preserve the memory of Pierre Curie and to perpetuate the work w…"
I have tried to preserve the memory of Pierre Curie and to perpetuate the work which was the object of his life.
I have tried to preserve the memory of Pierre Curie and to perpetuate the work which was the object of his life.
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"We must not forget that when radium was discovered no one knew that it would prove useful in hospitals. The work was one of pure science. And this is a proof that scientific work must not be considere…"
"You cannot hope to build a better world without improving the individuals."
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"I was taught that the way of progress was neither swift nor easy."
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The speaker explains that she has worked to keep alive the memory of Pierre Curie and to continue the scientific work that defined his life. It is a statement of devotion, commitment, and stewardship: she sees herself as guardian of both his legacy and his unfinished research, ensuring that his contributions are not forgotten and that the mission he pursued continues forward through her own efforts.
After Pierre Curie's sudden death in 1906, Marie took over his professorship at the Sorbonne, becoming its first female professor, and pressed forward with radioactivity research. She isolated pure radium, won a second Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1911, founded the Radium Institute, and wrote a biography of Pierre. Her life embodied this pledge: she turned private grief into decades of shared scientific labor carrying his name and vision forward.
In the early twentieth century, widowed women were expected to retreat into mourning, not inherit a husband's laboratory and chair at a major European university. Science was overwhelmingly male, and radioactivity was a brand-new field with unknown dangers. World War I soon followed, during which Curie deployed mobile X-ray units. Her public devotion to Pierre's legacy also helped shield her from scandal and sexist attacks that tried to diminish her independent achievements.
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