Most people discussed in this book are either queer or women whose work transcends the limitations and taboos that defined their eras. Following the author’s introduction, the book takes off with the chapter ‘Only the Dreamer Wakes’. It narrates the story of Johannes Kepler, a 17th century astronomer who discovered the laws of planetary motion among other things and developed his scientific methods at a time when — as Popova puts it — “God is mightier than nature, Devil more real and more omnipresent than gravity.”
Kepler’s story and his remarkable journey of scientific inquiry are woven with another remarkable astronomer and mathematician of the 19th century, Maria Mitchell. At the age of 12, Mitchell was besotted with the wonders of the cosmos and sturdy mathematical certainty. It was a time when women could not vote, weren’t entitled to formal education and a time when no woman had ever been hired by the United States government for any technical job. “Mitchell won’t live up to reap the vote, but would become many firsts: America’s first professional woman astronomer, the first woman admitted to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the first woman to be employed by the US government for a ‘specialised non-domestic skill’ — as a ‘computer of Venus’— a one-person GPS performing complex celestial calculations to help sailors navigate the globe.”
Even so, Mitchell’s genius and pioneering contributions to science, both as a woman and as a scientist, were not at all complemented with a peaceful inner life. She — as many others discussed in the book — lived a heartbreaking life of private relationships, on which Popova dwells at length in the chapter ‘What is Lost and What is Gained’.
In the chapter ‘The Much that Calls for More’, Popova tells us of “a new kind of woman.” Margaret Fuller was a fascinating woman who, from an early age, yearned for full actualisation of her potential. At the age of six, she was fluent in reading Latin and, by age 12, she conversed with her father on philosophy and pure mathematics. As Popova mentions, Fuller would later describe herself as “the much that calls for more”, which rightly so was manifested in the unfolding of her short but illustrious career. We know Fuller today as the pioneer of the women’s emancipation movement in America and the author of a groundbreaking book, Woman in the 19th Century.
But among her many achievements are also being the first female journalist and a foreign war correspondent for a major New York newspaper, and an advocate of prison reform and ‘negro’ voting rights at a time when it was inconceivable for a woman to have a say in domestic matters, much less in the political arena. Yet, despite the fact that Fuller was a woman in a largely patriarchal working environment, her grit and unshakable confidence made her one of the world’s most important persons: she changed the course of history for women and minorities to have more rights and dignity. Fuller wrote in her memoir, “In an environment like mine, what may have seemed too lofty or ambitious in my character was absolutely needed to keep the heart from breaking and enthusiasm from extinction ... nothing more widely distinguishes man from man than the energy of will.”
While every chapter in Figuring is remarkably insightful and humbling, the experience of reading them makes one wonder how far we have come; not only as women and men who can transcend and challenge their social and material limitations, but also to choose to live a life as they imagine it — a freedom most people did not have just a century and a half ago. The question of freedom brings to mind the origins of our civic and ethical consciousness, that most of us are allowed to voice and fight for today.
The passionate biographical sketches in Popova’s book, that weave the narrative of interconnected histories and what bind us all together across time and age, are an important reminder for us to reflect on the struggles which these extraordinary and trendsetting minds had to engage with in order for us to have a better world. Such a reflection only penetrates our lives when a storyteller such as Popova weaves a story around several exciting characters over the span of about four centuries and shakes us out of our relatively privileged lifestyles — which we have inherited on the shoulders of several men and women who fought for the freedoms we have today.
The reviewer is a PhD candidate at the Institute of Islamic Studies, McGill University, Canada. Her research focuses on the literary and intellectual traditions of Persian and Urdu languages in pre-modern North India
Figuring
By Maria Popova
Pantheon, US
ISBN: 978-1524748135
592pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, September 29th, 2019