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Einstein’s Wife

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Einstein’s Wife

The Real Story of Mileva Einstein-Marić

MIT Press,

15 min read
8 take-aways
Audio & text

What's inside?

Allen Esterson and David C. Cassidy detail the tragic life of Albert Einstein’s first wife.


Editorial Rating

7

Qualities

  • Eye Opening
  • Background

Recommendation

Albert Einstein’s first wife, Mileva Marić, also studied physics – rare for a woman in Europe in her day. She and Einstein met as students and wed before he published on relativity in 1905. Allen Esterson and David C. Cassidy detail Marić’s life, her college life (and grades), and her career and marital struggles. Despite the book’s awkward structure – one writer starts it, another finishes it and a chapter on women scientists splits it – the authors bring Marić’s youth, schooling and tragic life to light and explore how much she did – or didn’t – contribute to her husband’s work.

Summary

Publication of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein brought his first wife, Mileva Marić, to public attention.

Mileva Marić – pronounced Mar-itch – studied mathematics and physics in Europe alongside her husband, Albert Einstein, author of the theory of relativity. In time, his Nobel Prize paid for their divorce.

Marić came to public view with the publication of The Collected Papers of Albert Einstein in 1987. The section on his youth, covering 1879 to 1902, includes the first publication of 51 letters Einstein wrote to her. The collection’s publication also drew attention to a 1969 Marić biography by Serbian science professor Desanka Trbuhović-Gjurić titled In the Shadow of Albert Einstein: The Tragic Life of Mileva Einstein-Marić. The biography argues that Mileva Marić’s proficiency in mathematics surpassed Einstein’s and that she was an unrecognized co-author of his relativity paper. However, no verifiable evidence backs this claim.

In Marić’s time, women faced difficulties attaining an education in science.

Marić was...

About the Authors

Allen Esterson is a retired lecturer in mathematics and physics at Southwark College. Science historian David C. Cassidy is professor emeritus at Hofstra University. 


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