Yahoo Web Search

Search results

    • Image courtesy of messagemagazine.com

      messagemagazine.com

      • Though the mathematicians are ultimately replaced by electronic computers, a textual epilogue reveals Mary obtained her engineering degree and became NASA's first female African American engineer; Dorothy continued as NASA's first African American supervisor; and Katherine, accepted by Stafford as a report coauthor, went on to calculate the trajectories for the Apollo 11 and Space Shuttle missions.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hidden_Figures
  1. People also ask

  2. Summary. Analysis. Katherine Johnson continues to work with NASA, distinguishing herself again during the 1970 Apollo 13 crisis, when an explosion destroys the spacecraft’s electrical system making it impossible to navigate. The astronauts first try a method from a paper coauthored by Johnson to use the stars to map their way home, then a ...

  3. The climax of Hidden Figures occurs far before the end of the characters' real-life equivalents' lives. Structurally, Shetterly resolves this using the epilogue. While the narrative ends on a period of national change, Johnson, Vaughan, Jackson, and Darden are given personal resolutions decades after the late 60s.

  4. Summary. In Chapter 21, Out of the Past, the Future, Katherine Johnson worked on the problem of bringing a man safely home from space. The Russians put a man into orbit for nearly a full day. Finally, the launch date for the Mercury Project was set at February 12, 1962.

    • Summary: Chapter Twenty-One: Out of The Past, The Future
    • Summary: Chapter Twenty-Two: America Is For Everybody
    • Summary: Chapter Twenty-Three: to Boldly Go
    • Analysis: Chapters Twenty-One–Twenty-Three

    The press and the public are growing impatient with NASA and Project Mercury. Russia completes a seventeen-orbit mission while the Mercury engineers iron out a series of problems. Finally, in July of 1962, Project Mercury is ready to launch its first astronaut into Earth orbit: John Glenn. Like most pilots, he instinctively mistrusts fully automate...

    In August of 1963, Martin Luther King, Jr., gives his “I Have a Dream” speech to the crowd gathered for the March on Washington. The event organizer is A. Philip Randolph, head of the railroad porters’ union during the Roosevelt era. A few months later, Dorothy is recognized for twenty years of service at Langley. Randolph’s confrontation with Roos...

    In July of 1969, the Moon-bound Apollo 11 mission launches. A worldwide audience follows the mission with excitement. For Black Americans, however, the event highlights mixed-up national priorities. While billions of dollars are being spent to put two white men on the Moon, Black Americans on Earth are still denied access to gas station bathrooms. ...

    The fact that John Glenn still refers to Katherine as "the girl" is an example of white men’s ability to compartmentalize their need for a Black woman’s expertise, and their view that they still maintain a superior status. Her race against time in checking the computers is a classic literary trope of “man versus machine,” and while Katherine is alm...

  5. Apr 19, 2024 · Hidden Figures” powerfully highlights the relentless struggle black women faced in the scientific world, confronting deeply ingrained racism and sexism within a society structured against them. The protagonists navigate a workplace where bathrooms, cafeterias, and even workspaces are segregated.

  6. Hidden Figures recounts the true story of Dorothy Vaughan, Mary Jackson, and Katherine Johnson. These three Black women are the protagonists in their own life stories set against the backdrop of the Space Race and the Civil Rights Movement.

  7. This study guide for Margot Lee Shetterly's Hidden Figures offers summary and analysis on themes, symbols, and other literary devices found in the text. Explore Course Hero's library of literature materials, including documents and Q&A pairs.

  1. People also search for