VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД FIND US ON: YouTube Twitter
breakingnews
Go to main page   News   Sci-Tech   Sexual discrimination in space  
MORE ON THE STORY
10.03.2009, 16:43

Russian women to go into space again

The Director of the Federal Space Agency (Roskosmos) Anatoly Perminov has pledged that soon there will be women in the Russian cosmonauts’ regular staff.

16.06.2008, 04:47

Hats off to first woman in space

Forty-five years ago a girl from a small Russian village made history by becoming the first woman in space. Valentina Tereshkova paved the way for others to follow and is still revered as a Russian heroine.

Yuri Gagarin 12.04.2009, 00:52 1 comment

Yury’s night: a small step for man

Space, the final frontier and the battlefield on which the Cold War was fought, has long been a beacon for mankind.

Image from cfa.harvard.edu 19.12.2009, 01:20 11 comments

“Amazing” discovery of a new planet

As a group of astronomers has reported about the discovery of a new planet – possibly inhabitable – close to the solar system, space entrepreneur Jeff Manber has told RT why he thinks the discovery is so exciting.

20.10.2009, 11:41 7 comments

“The Hadron Collider will shed first light into the dark universe”

With the Hadron Collider scheduled to be operational soon, scientists believe that the secrets of the universe will soon be revealed.

02.07.2010, 08:08 6 comments

Mystery code in the solar wind

When astronomers discovered a pulsar for the first time, they thought the regular signal coming from the star was a call from aliens. A similar story happened in Russia, although it is far less-known to the public.

12.08.2009, 20:26 5 comments

"Russia's air defense - to balance the US space threat"

As Russia cannot influence US military advances in space diplomatically, it is turning to military means to balance this threat, said Ruslan Pukhov from the Centre for Analysis of Strategies and Technologies.

30.05.2009, 05:02 4 comments

Soyuz spacecraft docking at ISS

On Friday, the Soyuz TMA-15 spacecraft has docked at the International Space Station. With its arrival the permanent crew of the ISS has doubled to six people.

09.10.2009, 19:40 4 comments

“People watching [lunar experiment] were disappointed”

Scientists worldwide are watching the huge clouds of lunar soil kicked up by a NASA probe which smashed into the moon hours ago. James Oberg from NASA told RT many were disappointed by the brightness of the clouds.

Photo www.delfi.lv 26.10.2009, 23:18 3 comments

Latvian UFO revealed to be PR trick

A mysterious UFO that allegedly fell over Latvia on Sunday has turned out to be a fake. A local mobile operator has confessed to being involved in staging a hoax with the meteorite.

Sexual discrimination in space

Published: 25 July, 2009, 09:15
Edited: 14 September, 2009, 02:01

Svetlana Savitskaya on a spacewalk

(7.5Mb) embed video

TAGS: Space, SciTech


Twenty-five years ago Russian cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya became the second woman to travel into orbit, the first also Russian, but she was the first woman to walk in space.

Svetlana was 36 when she was thrust into the Cold War space race. While in orbit she undertook hours of experiments and, in doing so, broke new ground for women to join the front line of space exploration.

“Americans were preparing to send women into space. I was called to our Ministry. The question was – what about us? Would we able to do it? Was there enough time? I said then, ‘why not?’” remembers Svetlana Savitskaya. “We had to keep our priority positions where possible.”

Progress vs. prejudice

It is true the standing of the whole country was at stake, but Svetlana says her mission was tough for other reasons, as she also was the first to fight against sex discrimination.

“Even among our space-colleagues there were men wondering why we needed to weld and said that we might burn each other’s space suits or the spaceship’s exterior. It is a great responsibility,” Savitskaya said. “If I listen to their concerns, then people could have said that surely it was not something women should do. But after my spaceflight, everyone had to shut up.”

Decades on from Savitskaya's revolutionary flight, the actions of a woman in space are in the spotlight for very different reasons.

Last year, a female American astronaut Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper lost her tool bag on a spacewalk at the International Space Station.


Svetlana Savitskaya
“There was a split second when I did see it floating away and I started to judge how far away it was and thinking ‘Well can I reach and get it?’” said Heidemarie Stefanyshyn-Piper later during a video connection with Mission Control Center-Houston. “And then I thought no, that would probably just make things worse, and the best thing to do would be to just let it go.”

Svetlana Savitskaya says it did not exactly help the cause of women in space.

“Well, they should be thankful that it was just a closed bag. It could have been worse if she scattered instruments!” laughed Savitskaya. “But, of course, we would consider it as a disadvantage and a work-performance defect. It’s just not professional – no matter the sex.”

And while women in space will always face more scrutiny than men, the fact that women can continue to travel into the stars can be owed to Svetlana Savitskaya’s legacy.

+16 (18 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
24.07.2009, 13:20

Self-assembling gears to make way for nanomachines

Material scientists have devised a technique that allows micro and nanoscale gears to assemble themselves, which will be a cheaper alternative to microlithography.

27.07.2009, 15:58

Digital drug spam sweeps Russian search engines

Websites selling to Russian customers audio files allegedly causing drug-like effects are mushrooming. Medics say these “i-dozers” or “digital drugs” act rather like a placebo, if they act at all.

Mike (unregistered) December 24, 2011, 00:37
0

@William - I do believe you are writing this from a mental institution. Plenty is already known about the exposure of the human body on space and it isn't pretty reading. You want to expose children to that? Do take your pills please?
@Paula - Why SHOULD there be an all female crew? That is a notion as sexist as enforcing all male crews - which by the way never was officially enforced - there just wasn't any female astronauts around at one point. Anyhow, lets keep the subject of gender wars out of space and keep the onus on science, eh?

William September 13, 2009, 17:22
0

Now that we have man and woman in space why not take it furtheh send a husband and wife in space start a family as an experment and find out as time gose how space has an efect on the children from fetious to death we all those of us that believe in life on other planets are wornding how human life will react to life in space from fetious to death why not give it a try and let the world know how time with conception to death in space turns out i know i am one that is interested in how the children of the future space traval will turn out to be. Will they be like us or will they be smarter or not as smart as us

Paula Misovich August 07, 2009, 21:43
0

I am wondering whether any Russian women are training to be cosmonauts. Also, I am unaware of how the Russian space agency decides which people are next to fly into space. I shall spend a day or two looking into the matter.