Marie Curie — "I am a dreamer. I am a scientist. I am a woman. I am a human being. I am all of …"
I am a dreamer. I am a scientist. I am a woman. I am a human being. I am all of these things. And I am proud of it.
I am a dreamer. I am a scientist. I am a woman. I am a human being. I am all of these things. And I am proud of it.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"First principle: never to let one's self be beaten down by persons or by events."
"We must not turn back, we must not recoil."
"I am among those who think that science has great beauty."
"I have been reproached for having given myself to science. I have been reproached for having neglected my family. I have been reproached for having neglected my country. I have been reproached for hav…"
"A scientist must be a child. He must be curious. He must be eager to learn. He must be willing to make mistakes."
Found in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
The speaker affirms that a person can hold many identities at once without contradiction. Being imaginative, analytical, female, and simply human are not competing labels but overlapping truths that together make up a whole self. Rather than letting society pick one role to define her, she claims all of them openly and refuses to feel shame or smallness about any single piece.
Marie Curie lived every label in this quote. She dreamed up research into invisible rays, did the rigorous lab work that isolated polonium and radium, and navigated a male-dominated physics world as the first woman to win a Nobel and the only person to win in two sciences. Widowed young, raising two daughters while running a lab, she refused to let any one role cancel another.
In late 19th and early 20th century Europe, women were largely barred from universities, laboratories, and professional societies. French institutions rejected Curie for the Academy of Sciences despite two Nobels, and the press attacked her personal life more than her work. Declaring oneself dreamer, scientist, woman, and human in one breath pushed back against an era that insisted a respectable woman could be only one narrow thing.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty