Marjorie Senechal Explained

Marjorie Senechal
Birth Name:Marjorie Wikler
Birth Date:1939
Birth Place:St. Louis, Missouri
Alma Mater:University of Chicago
Illinois Institute of Technology
Doctoral Advisor:Abe Sklar
Workplaces:Smith College
Fields:mathematics
history of science

Marjorie Lee Senechal (née Wikler, born 1939) is an American mathematician and historian of science, the Louise Wolff Kahn Professor Emerita in Mathematics and History of Science and Technology at Smith College[1] and editor-in-chief of The Mathematical Intelligencer.[2] In mathematics, she is known for her work on tessellations and quasicrystals; she has also studied ancient Parthian electric batteries[3] and published several books about silk.[4]

Biography

Senechal was born in St. Louis, Missouri, the oldest of four children of Abraham Wikler, a United States Public Health Service physician. The family soon moved to Lexington, Kentucky, and Senechal grew up as a "narco brat" on the grounds of the Lexington Narcotic Hospital, a prison farm for drug addicts, where her father was associate director.[5] [6] She was educated at the Training School of the University of Kentucky, a small school with only one class in each grade; Senechal later wrote that the school's too-easy classwork, snobbish classmates, and anti-Jewish discrimination made her miserable.

She left Lafayette High School after the 11th grade to begin her undergraduate studies as a pre-med at the University of Chicago, but soon switched to mathematics, graduating in 1960.[7] While doing graduate studies at the Illinois Institute of Technology, she married mathematician Lester Senechal, and moved to Arizona with him before completing her own degree.[7] Nevertheless, she finished her Ph.D. in 1965, under the supervision of Abe Sklar; her thesis concerned functional equations.

Unable to get her own faculty position at Arizona because of the anti-nepotism rules then in place, she and her husband visited Brazil, supported by a Fulbright Scholarship. They then moved to Massachusetts, where she took the faculty position at Smith that she would keep for the rest of her career.[5] She eventually divorced Senechal, and married photographer Stan Sherer in 1989.[7] She retired in 2007; a festival in 2006 honoring her impending retirement included the performance of a musical play that she wrote with The Talking Band member Ellen Maddow, loosely centered around the theme of aperiodic tilings and the life of amateur mathematician Robert Ammann.[8] [9]

Awards and honors

Senechal won the Mathematical Association of America's Carl B. Allendoerfer Award for excellence in expository writing in Mathematics Magazine in 1982, for her article, "Which Tetrahedra Fill Space?"[7] [10] In 2008, her book American Silk 1830 – 1930 won the Millia Davenport Publication Award of the Costume Society of America.[11] In 2012, she became a fellow of the American Mathematical Society.[12]

Books

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.math.smith.edu/faculty.php Faculty listing
  2. https://www.springer.com/mathematics/journal/283 Publisher's web site for The Mathematical Intelligencer
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  4. As well as the two books written by Senechal listed in the Books section, she edited and contributed to Silk Unraveled!: Threads of Human History, Smith College Studies in History 53, 2005.
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  11. http://www.costumesocietyamerica.com/grantsawards/milliadavenport.html Millia Davenport Publication Award
  12. https://www.ams.org/profession/fellows-list List of Fellows of the American Mathematical Society
  13. Review of Crystalline Symmetries by Doris Schattschneider (1993), SIAM Review 35 (2): 335–336, .
  14. Review of Crystalline Symmetries by R. L. E. Schwarzenberger (1992), .
  15. Review of Quasicrystals and Geometry by István Hargittai (1997), Advanced Materials 9 (12): 994–996, .
  16. Review of Quasicrystals and Geometry by Richard Kenyon (1996), .
  17. https://www.ams.org/notices/199604/radin.pdf Review of Quasicrystals and Geometry
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  19. Northampton's Century of Silk was produced as part of a year-long city celebration of silk, co-organized by Senechal; see .
  20. Review of American Silk by Laurence F. Gross (2008), Technology and Culture 49 (3): 796–798, .
  21. Review of American Silk by Carolyn C. Cooper (2009), Journal of Interdisciplinary History 39 (3): 450–452, .
  22. Review of American Silk by Melinda Talbot Nasardinov (2008), Winterthur Portfolio 42 (4): 293–294, .
  23. Review of American Silk by Marla Miller (2008), The New England Quarterly 81 (1): 165–168, .
  24. . See also a follow-up exchange of letters between Senechal and Deng.
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