作者 人物列表
斯塔夫理阿诺斯 L. S. Stavrianos杰罗姆·大卫·塞林格 Jerome David Salinger海伦·凯勒 Helen Keller
哈雷特·阿班 Hallett Edward Abend哈罗德·伊罗生 Harold R.Isaacs鲁思.本尼迪克特 Ruth Benedict
明妮·魏特琳 Minnie Vautrin诺曼·卡森斯 Norman Cousins狄克逊·韦克特 Dixon Wecter
戴尔·卡耐基 Dale Carnegie罗曼·文森特·皮尔 Norman Vincent Peale查尔斯·哈尼尔 Charls E. Haanel
乔治·克拉森 George S. Clason杨振宁 Chen Ning Yang马克·费尔特 Mark Felt
詹姆斯·麦格雷戈·伯恩斯 James MacGregor Burns彼得·德鲁克 Peter F. Drucker亨利·福特 Henry Ford
戴维·洛克菲勒 David Rockefeller凯瑟琳·卡尔 Cathleen Carl埃尔文·布鲁克斯·怀特 Elwyn Brooks White
伊迪丝·华顿 Edith Wharton海明威 Ernest Hemingway弗·司各特·菲茨杰拉德 F. Scott Fitzgerald
威廉·福克纳 William Faulkner艾里克斯·哈利 Alex Haley约瑟夫·海勒 Joseph Heller
亨利·米勒 Henry Miller艾萨克·艾西莫夫 Isaac Asimov詹姆斯·凯恩 James Mallahan Cain
杰克·凯鲁亚克 Jack Kerouac玛·金·罗琳斯 Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings玛格丽特·米切尔 Margaret Mitchell
罗姆·大卫·塞林格 Jerome David Salinger德莱塞 Theodore Dreiser亨德里克·威廉·房龙 Hendrik Willem van Loon
汤姆·戈德温 Tom Godwin罗斯·麦唐诺 Ross MacDonald欧文·华莱士 Irving Wallace
马里奥·普佐 Mario Puzo卡尔·杰拉西 Carl Djerassi埃德加·斯诺 Edgar Snow
施赖勃 Flora Rheta Schreiber莱斯利·沃勒 Leslie Waller哈罗德·罗宾斯 Harold Robbins
西德尼·谢尔顿 Sidney Sheldon房龙 Hendrik Willem van Loon理查德·马丁·斯特恩 Richard Martin Stern
亨利·丹克尔 Henry Denker詹姆斯·希尔顿 James Hilton赫尔曼·沃克 Herman Wouk
托马斯·沃尔夫 Thomas Wolfe布赖恩·克罗泽 Brian Crozier费慰梅 Wilma Fairbank
约翰·托兰 John Toland卡洛斯·贝克 Carlos Baker崔佛·杜普伊 Trevor N. Dupuy
乔治·巴顿 George Patton IV欧文·斯通 Irving Stone弗农·阿·沃尔特斯 Vernon A. Walters
卡尔·杰拉西 Carl Djerassi
作者  (1923年10月29日)

现实百态 Realistic Fiction《诺贝尔的囚徒》

阅读卡尔·杰拉西 Carl Djerassi在小说之家的作品!!!
  卡尔·杰拉西,著名科学家,口服避孕药之父,美国斯坦福大学荣誉退休教授,美国国家科学院院士,美国科学与艺术学院院士,瑞典皇家科学院外籍院士。1923年出生在奥地利的维也纳,15岁移民美国。1945年获威斯康星大学博士学位。杰拉西在化学上卓有建树,不仅是唯一获得美国国家科学奖章和美国国家技术奖章的科学家,他还获得了首届沃尔夫化学奖、美国化学界最高奖——普里斯特利奖等多项荣誉。此外他还入选美国发明家名人堂,并荣获17所国际著名学府的名誉博士学位。1999年,他被《泰晤士报》评为“1000年来最有影响力的30大人物”之一。
  杰拉西在退休后转向文学创作,杰拉西认为自已从事文学创作的原始动机之一,是来自于他对遭受一段感情创伤后的情绪表达的需要;动机之二是对未曾涉足的领域的尝试,因为文学是区别于自然科学的完全不同的智力活动。他为此出版了被自己称为“幻想中的科学”(science-in-fiction)的小说《诺贝尔的囚徒》、《坎特的困境》、《布尔巴基的赌局》、《NO》等五部小说和《完美的误解》、《氧:关于“追认诺贝尔奖”的二幕话剧》、(与霍夫曼合写)等三部剧本,以及个人自传《避孕药的是是非非:杰拉西自传》。他用小说来表达自己对科学家、科学界的思考,因为畅销而赢得了国际性声誉。另外他还发表了大量的诗歌,散文和短篇小说。杰拉西还在旧金山附近建立了一个艺术庄园,每节为艺术家提供工作场所和住宿,从1982年以来,已经有1300多名从事视觉艺术、文学、舞蹈、音乐的艺术家接受了赞助。


  Carl Djerassi (born October 29, 1923 in Vienna, Austria), is an American chemist, novelist, and playwright best known for his contribution to the development of the first oral contraceptive pill (OCP). Djerassi is emeritus professor of chemistry at Stanford University.
  He participated in the invention in 1951, together with Mexican Luis E. Miramontes and Hungarian George Rosenkranz, of the progestin norethindrone—which, unlike progesterone, remained effective when taken orally and was far stronger than the naturally occurring hormone. His preparation was first administered as an oral contraceptive to animals by Gregory Pincus and Min Chueh Chang and to women by John Rock. Djerassi remarked that he did not have birth control in mind when he began working with progesterone—"not in our wildest dreams… did we imagine (it)".
  He is also the author of several novels in the "science-in-fiction" genre, including Cantor's Dilemma, in which he explores the ethics of modern scientific research through his protagonist, Dr. Cantor.
  
  Djerassi hailed from a Jewish family, as the son of Alice Friedmann, an Ashkenazi Viennese Jew with roots in Galicia, and Samuel Djerassi, a Bulgarian Sephardic Jew. Following his parents' divorce, Djerassi and his mother moved to Vienna to take advantage of the better school system. Until age fourteen, he attended the same realgymnasium that Sigmund Freud had attended many years earlier; he spent summers in Bulgaria with his father. After the Anschluss, his father briefly remarried his mother in 1938 to allow Carl to escape the Nazi regime and flee to Bulgaria, where he lived with his father for a year. Djerassi's father was a physician who specialized in treating syphilis with the existing arsenical drugs. His successful practice in Sofia was limited to a few wealthy patients, whose treatment lasted for years. A few years later, Djerassi arrived with his mother in the United States, nearly penniless—they had only $20 between them, which was swindled from them by a cab driver. Djerassi's mother worked in a group practice in upstate New York. In 1949, his father also emigrated to the United States and eventually settled near his son in San Francisco.
  Djerassi briefly attended Tarkio College, now defunct, then studied chemistry at Kenyon College, which is famous for literary criticism and the Kenyon Review but not known for chemistry. He graduated summa cum laude, then got his PhD at the University of Wisconsin. He worked for CIBA in New Jersey, developing Pyribenzamine (tripelenamine), his first patent and the first commercial antihistamine.
  In 1949, Djerassi was recruited to be the associate director of research at Syntex in Mexico City by then-technical director George Rosenkranz, working there from 1950-1951. At Syntex, he worked on a new synthesis of cortisone based on diosgenin, a steroid sapogenin derived from a Mexican wild yam. His team later synthesized norethindrone, a progestin-analogue that was effective when taken by mouth. This became part of the first successful oral contraceptive, the combined oral contraceptive pill (COCP). COCPs became known colloquially as the birth-control pill, or simply, the Pill.
  In 1959, Djerassi became a professor of chemistry at Stanford University and the president of Syntex Laboratories in Mexico City and Palo Alto, California. The Syntex connection made Djerassi a rich man. He bought a large tract of land in Woodside, California, started a cattle ranch, and also built up a large art collection. He started a new company, Zoecon, which focused on pest control without insecticides, using modified insect growth hormones to stop insects from metamorphosing from the larval stage to the pupal and adult stages. He sold Zoecon to Occidental Petroleum, which later sold it to Sandoz. Part of Zoecon lingers in Dallas, Texas, making products to control fleas and other pests.
  On July 5, 1978, Djerassi's daughter Pamela, an artist, killed herself. Djerassi considered how he could help living artists, rather than collecting dead ones. He donated his Klee collection to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, effective on his death. He visited existing artist's colonies, such as Yaddo and McDowell, and decided to create his own. He closed down his cattle ranch, converted the barn and the houses to residential and work space for a number of artists of many kinds, brought in a prize-winning chef, and moved to an office building he had renovated in San Francisco, converting one floor into a posh apartment, where he displayed part of his art collection and hosted a literary salon). He hung up his lab coat and became an emeritus professor.
  In 1992 he was awarded the Priestley Medal. Austria has issued a postage stamp with Djerassi's picture on it. The Austrian government also sent him a new Austrian passport. He was awarded the Austrian Cross of Honor for Art and Science, First Class, in 1999.
  [edit]Social impact of scientific work
  
  Djerassi perceived the pill as having a huge impact on the social processes of women and men, which to a significant extent is influenced through the sociobiology of sexual reproduction. He anticipated a far greater social impact on men than on women, in what he called as the feminization of men, implying the "social-feminization"[cite this quote] of laws and social values in favor of women in society as a whole.
  [edit]Awards and honors
  
  In 1973, Djerassi was awarded the National Medal of Science by President Nixon for his work on the Pill which was ironic to a degree, as he reported in his memoir, his name at the time was on the infamous "Nixon's enemies list", which was compiled by Charles Colson and Nixon. He learned this from an article in the San Francisco Examiner, several months later.
  In 1975 he was awarded the Perkin Medal.
  In 1978, he was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame. In 1991, he was awarded the National Medal of Technology for "his broad technological contributions to solving environmental problems; and for his initiatives in developing novel, practical approaches to insect control products that are biodegradable and harmless."
  In 1992 he was awarded the Priestley Medal.
  Austria has issued a postage stamp with Djerassi's picture on it. The Austrian government also sent him a new Austrian passport. He was awarded the Austrian Cross of Honor for Art and Science, First Class, in 1999.
  Djerassi is a member of the Board of Sponsors of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and is chairman of the Pharmanex Scientific Advisory Board.
  Djerassi Glacier on Brabant Island in Antarctica is named after Carl Djerassi.
  In 2009 awarded the Alecrin Prize in Vigo (Spain).
  [edit]Books
  
  [edit]Non-fiction
  Optical Rotatory Dispersion, McGraw-Hill & Company, 1960.
  The Politics of Contraception, W H Freeman & Company, 1981, ISBN 0-7167-1342-X
  Steroids Made it Possible (Profiles, Pathways, and Dreams), American Chemical Society, 1990, ISBN 0-8412-1773-4 (autobiography)
  The Pill, Pygmy Chimps, and Degas' Horse, Basic Books, 1992, ISBN 0-465-05758-6 (autobiography)
  From the Lab into The World: A Pill for People, Pets, and Bugs, American Chemical Society, 1994, ISBN 0-8412-2808-6
  Paul Klee: Masterpieces of the Djerassi Collection, (coeditor), Prestel Publishing, 2002, ISBN 3-7913-2779-8
  Dalla pillola alla penna, Di Renzo Editore, 2004, ISBN 8883230868
  This Man's Pill: Reflections on the 50th Birthday of the Pill , Oxford University Press, USA, 2004, ISBN 0-19-860695-8 (autobiography)
  [edit]Fiction
  Futurist and Other Stories, Macdonald, 1989, ISBN 0-356-17500-6
  The Clock Runs Backwards, Story Line Press, 1991, ISBN 0-934257-75-2
  Marx, Deceased, University of Georgia Press, 1996, ISBN 0-8203-1835-3
  [edit]Science-in-fiction
  Djerassi describes some of his novels as "science-in-fiction" - fiction which portrays the lives of real scientists, with all their accomplishments, conflicts, and aspirations. The genre is also referred to as Lab lit.
  Cantor's Dilemma, Penguin, 1989, ISBN 0-14-014359-9
  The Bourbaki Gambit, Penguin, 1994, ISBN 0-14-025485-4
  Menachem's Seed, Penguin, 1996, ISBN 0-14-027794-3
  NO, Penguin, 1998, ISBN 0-14-029654-9
  [edit]Drama
  An Immaculate Misconception: Sex in an Age of Mechanical Reproduction, Imperial College Press, 2000, ISBN 1-86094-248-2 (adapted from the novel Menachem's Seed)
  L.A. Theatre Works, Audio Theatre Collection CD, 2004, ISBN 1-58081-286-4
  Oxygen, Wiley-VCH, (with Roald Hoffmann, coauthor), 2001, ISBN 3-527-30413-4
  Newton's Darkness: Two Dramatic Views, (with David Pinner, coauthor), Imperial College Press, 2004, ISBN 1-86094-390-X
  Four Jews on Parnassus
  [edit]Bibliography
  
  Marks, Lara V (2004). Sexual Chemistry: A History Of The Contraceptive Pill. Diane Publishing Company. ISBN 0-300-08943-0.
  Tone, Andrea (2001). Devices and Desires. New York: Hill and Wang, A Division of Farrar, Strauss and Giroux. ISBN 0-8090-3817-X.
    

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