As of 2021, a total of 57 women had won the Nobel Prize. The fields in which they won awards were as follows: Physics: Two women won the award, namely, Mary Curie (1903) and Mary Curie's daughter, Elizabeth Curie (1935). Chemistry: Seven women won: Mary Curie (1911), Yerna Venter Hoff (1935), Dorothy Hodgkin (1964), Leo Prato (2009), Ada Jonah Selche (2009), Amy Noble (2009), and Frances Arnold (2018). Physiology or Medicine: 13 women won: Diana Scott Yulven (1947), Gerd Coleman (1947), Rosalyn Franklin (1962, posthumous), Lee Bowen (1964), Barbara McClintock (1977), Rosie Gallop (1983), Rita Levy-Montalcini (1986), Gerd Boyle (1988), Elvin Noble (1995), Lin Rune (2004), Frances Henner (2009) Mary Eliane Sati (2009) and William Kaelin (2020). Literature: 15 women won the award: Selma Lagrev (1909), Graz Muriel (1926), Sigrid Urdin (1928), Hilda Durley (1991), Toni Morrison (1993), Olga Tuqili (1996), Doris Lessing (2004), Elfrid Eller (2009), Alice Munroe (2013) Svetlana Alexeyevich (2015), Olga Tokarchuk (2015), Louise Gluck (2015), Olga Gruz-Vernicket (2018), Louise Seidel Stadler (2020), and Arnie Spigman (2020). Peace Prize: Seventeen women won the award, including Besser van Suttner (1905), Jane Adams (1946), Eleanor Franklin D. Rooster (1946), Elena Franklin D. Rooster (1946), Amy Wright (1946), Amy Morton (1946), Bill Sherman (1946), Emily Balch Ross (1946), Jane Adams (1946), Karl van Ossietzki (1978), Adel Lachter (1982), Anu Sahari (2003), Alan Johnson Saliva (2004), Linde Johnson Roebling (2011), salvador Sanchis Cerro (2011), Nejati Wa Doss (2018), and Nina Tunberg (2018).
As of 2021, a total of 15 women had won the Nobel Prize in Literature. Literature: 15 women won the award: Selma Lagrev (1909), Graz Muriel (1926), Sigrid Urdin (1928), Hilda Durley (1991), Toni Morrison (1993), Olga Tuqili (1996), Doris Lessing (2004), Elfrid Eller (2009), Alice Munroe (2013) Svetlana Alexeyevich (2015), Olga Tokarchuk (2015), Louise Gluck (2015), Olga Gruz-Vernicket (2018), Louise Seidel Stadler (2020), and Arnie Spigman (2020).
Alice Romen was the 12th woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Alice Romen was the 14th woman to win the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Poland Two people. They were Staroslawekwczyc and Jacques Derrida.
Many female scientists have won the Nobel Prize in history. Here are some examples: 1. Eleanor Blackwell-She won the 1972 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for discovering the double spiral structure of DNA. 2 Margaret Atwood (Margaret Atwood)-won the 1954 Nobel Prize in Physics for her contribution to electronics. 3 Susan B. Anthony (Susan B. Anthony)-won the 1995 Nobel Prize in Physics for his contribution to quantum mechanics. 4. Marie Curie-Two-time Nobel Prize in Physics and Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her contributions to nuclear physics and biochemistry. 5 Walter Kaufman (Walter Kaufman)-won the 2014 Nobel Prize in Economics for his contribution to computer science. 6 Janet Hyde Littman (Janet Hyde Littman)-won the 2018 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for her contribution to chemical synthesis. These were just a few examples of female Nobel Prize winners. Female scientists had made outstanding contributions in various fields.
The United States included: - Walter Whitman (1912 Nobel Prize in Literature) - Jack Kerouac (Jack London, 1968 Nobel Prize in Literature) - Henry James (1910 Nobel Prize in Literature) - Alexandre Dumas (D D Enlighque, 1936 Nobel Prize in Literature) - Ernest Hemmingway (E B White, 1954 Nobel Prize in Literature) - Faulkner (John won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1968) - Calvino (1994 Nobel Prize in Literature) - Margaret Atwood (Margaret Atwood won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1968) - Thomas Pynchon (1972 Nobel Prize in Literature) - William Faulkner (William F Scott won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1916) - Nabokov (F Scott Fitzgerald, 1960 Nobel Prize in Literature) It is worth noting that this list is not complete because some awards may change many times due to different selection criteria and procedures.
Not many women have won the novel prize historically. It's a relatively small number compared to men.
As of October 2022, there were 10 Nobel Prize winners in Literature. Their names were as follows: 1. Walter Coren 2. William F. Buckley 3. Albert Camus 4. John Stanbeck 5 George Orwell 6 Margaret Atwood (Margaret Atwood) 7 Carlicco 8. Isaac Asimov James Joyce 10 Paul Thomas Anderson It was important to note that the Nobel Prize in Literature was not based on lifetime achievements.
So far, four scientists have won the Nobel Prize for their inventions related to medical devices. 1 American scientists John F. Hopkins and Peter Hopkins won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2016 for discovering the mechanism of smoking on lung cancer and discovering the drug to quit smoking. Chinese scientist Tu Youyou won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2015 for discovering the way to treat malaria with artesunate, the first drug to completely cure malaria. 3 Japanese scientist Yamada Taro (Satoshi, University of Tokyo) He won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 2001 for his invention of a method to produce high-purity glucose. 4 German scientist Martin First won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1994 for his discovery of electron transfer at the molecular level.
There are many women who have won the Nobel Prize. Here are some examples: - Linda Edelen:2019 Swedish mathematician. - Kristine Arora: Swedish physicist in 2015. - Jennifer Hattingh: Female mathematician of 2010. - Jennifer Highsmith: Female mathematician in 2006. - Lily Tomlinson: Female physicist in 2004. - Marsha Turing: Female computer scientist in 1999. - [2008: Female biologist.] - Christina Wolf (2006): Female scientist. It should be noted that although the Nobel Prize awards cover a wide range of fields, the number and quality of women receiving the award may vary in different fields and years.