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The Popularization of Science
Portrait of M. and Mme Lavoisier, by Jacques-Louis David, 1788, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Women ususally participated in the sciences through an association with a male relative or spouse. For example, Marie-Anne Pierette Paulze worked collaboratively with her husband, Antoine Lavoisier. Aside from assisting in Lavoisier’s laboratory research, she was responsible for translating a number of English texts into French for her husband’s work on the new chemistry. Paulze also illustrated many of her husband’s publications, such as his Treatise on Chemistry (1789).
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"David_-_Portrait_of_Monsieur_Lavoisier_and_His_Wife.jpg."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_in_the_Age_of_Enlightenment#/media/File:David_-_Portrait_of_Monsieur_Lavoisier_and_His_Wife.jpg
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