Watson and DNA : making a scientific revolution

著者

    • McElheny, Victor K

書誌事項

Watson and DNA : making a scientific revolution

Victor K. McElheny

Wiley, 2003 [reprinted 2003]

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 1

この図書・雑誌をさがす

注記

Originally published: Reading, Mass.; Oxford: Perseus

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

An account of one of the biggest scientific breakthroughs of the past century...In 1950 a young American zoologist, James Watson, came to Cambridge to work on molecular biology. From 1950--1953 he worked with Francis Crick, during which time they solved the structure of DNA -- seen as one of the biggest scientific breakthroughs of the past century -- and for which they were awarded a shared Nobel Prize in 1962. Watson returned to the US where he became Professor of Molecular Biology at Harvard and subsequently Director of the Cold Spring Harbour Laboratory. He was appointed Head of the US Human Genome Project in 1988, and was pivotal to guiding the project through the controversy surrounding genetic research. His collaboration with The Wellcome Trust helped to establish the Sanger Centre as the focus for the UK sequencing effort of the human genome. Giving a balanced view of Watsona s whole life and work, this biography traces the stages of this discovery, the setbacks, false starts and breakthroughs, putting Watson and Crick within the context of the other work being done at the time. It also looks at Watsona s whole career including his later genome work and his early life. Victor K. McElheny is a prominent science writer who has been writing about the revolution in molecular biology and biotechnology for over three decades. His interest in James D. Watson spans the years from his first meeting with Watson in 1962 to the present day. He is a Harvard graduate who also headed the Knight Science Journalism Fellowships at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His work has been featured by The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Science and the BBC. aeo There has been considerable criticism lately (particularly in a biography of Rosalind Franklin by Brenda Maddox) that James D. Watsona s own account of his work, The Double Helix, presented an exceptionally biased view of events. This biography is based on interviews with all his contemporaries to present a more balanced view. aeo A biography of a extremely talented man -- he gained his PhD at the remarkably young age of 22 -- who has made a major contribution towards the shaping of the future world aeo Explains how the structure of DNA was discovered aeo Gives an insight into the workings of the world of science and scientists aeo 2003 is 50 years since the discovery of DNA, which will undoubtly ensure coverage of the progress to date in this field, and there is also a five--part series currently in production on James Watson and featuring the author of this book, which is due to be screened in Spring 2003 on Channel 4.

目次

Preface. Acknowledgments. Prologue: 19 October 1962. 1. Books and Birds: "Growing Up" in Chicago. 2. Target, The Gene: Bloomington and "Paradise" 3. Stumbling on Gold: Two Smart Alecks in Cambridge. 4. A Beautiful Molecule: Being Believed. 5. Now What? Thrashing Around. 6. Harvard: "Few Dared Call Him to Account". 7. Minifesto and Marriage. 8. "Fresh, Arrogant, Catty, Bratty, and Funny". 9. A Passion for Building: Cold Spring Harbor. 10. "Higher" Cells: Science at Cold Spring Harbor. 11. "Odd Man Out": Recombinant DNA. 12. Genome: "It Is So Obvious". Epilogue: "Ia am an Optimist". James Dewey Watson: A Brief Chronology. Interviews by the Author. Notes. Index. About the Author.

「Nielsen BookData」 より

詳細情報

ページトップへ