1st Edition
Chromosome Woman, Nomad Scientist E. K. Janaki Ammal, A Life 1897–1984
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Acknowledgements
E. K. Janaki Ammal: A Timeline
Prologue
1 Tellicherry: A Modern Thiya Family
2 Madras I: Science and Politics in a Cosmopolitan City
3 Michigan I: First Lessons in Internationalism
4 Michigan II: The Private Life of Plants
5 England: Love, Tulips and Chiasmata
6 Madras II: A Flora of South India
7 Trivandrum: A Teaching Interlude
8 Trivandrum–Coimbatore–Krusadai: Unforgettable Sojourn
9 Coimbatore I: Dreaming of Russia
10 Coimbatore II: Making Order Out of Chaos
11 Great Britain I: Doing Science in the War Years
12 Merton–Kew: The Chromosome Atlas of Flowering Plants
13 Wisley I: Maker of Tetraploids
14 Nepal: A Pilgrim of Science
15 Wisley II: Craze for Chromosome Counts
16 Delhi: Director of Agriculture
17 Wisley III: The ‘Wanderings’ of Flowering Plants
18 Paris–ondon: On the Camellia Trail
19 Calcutta: Modernising Botany in India
20 Oak Ridge–nn Arbor–rinceton: Tracer Atoms and Agriculture
21 Kandy: The Humid Tropics
22 Lucknow–llahabad: The Central Botanical Laboratory
23 Jammu & Kashmir I: A Border Zone of Mixed Flora
24 Jammu & Kashmir II: High Altitude Flora, Polyploidy and Variation
25 Trombay: A Radiation Interlude
26 Madras III: The Madras Mint, Solanum and Other Stories
27 Madras IV: Forest Tracts and a Protest Movement
28 Madras–ilgiris: Hill Tribes and Secret Herbs
29 The Final Salaams
Epilogue: Portrait of a Nomad Woman Scientist
Archival Sources
E. K. Janaki Ammal’s Publications
General Bibliography
Index
Biography
Savithri Preetha Nair received her doctorate in 2003, from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London, for her dissertation on the museum and the shaping of the sciences in colonial India. Nair’s research interests include history of science, modernity and enlightenment at the turn of the nineteenth century, history and politics of collecting for science, sociology of knowledge, the public museum and women in science in colonial and post-colonial India. Among her publications is the co-authored (with Richard Axelby) Science and the Changing Environment in India: A Guide to Sources in the India Office Records 1780–1920 (British Library, London, 2010), and the monograph, Raja Serfoji II: Science, Medicine and Enlightenment in Tanjore, 1786–1832 (Routledge, 2012), besides several papers in peer-reviewed international journals and edited volumes. Nair is an independent scholar and divides her time between London and Kerala.
“Janaki Ammal’s was an exemplary life, and she has been lucky in her biographer. Historian of science, Savithri Preetha Nair, matches her subject’s zest and energy, following her traces in far-flung archives in the United States, the United Kingdom and India. She closely tracks Janaki Ammal’s relations with her scientific peers, and with her extended family (to whom she was very close). Her scientific research and achievements are narrated expertly, in language accessible to a lay audience but with no sacrifice as regards complexity and nuance. When published, this will be the best biography of an Indian scientist written thus far. In the authoritativeness of its research, and the sensitivity of its treatment, it far outdoes the existing biographies of male scientific icons such as C. V. Raman, Homi Bhabha, and Meghnad Saha.” — Ramachandra Guha in The Telegraph
“Savithri Preetha Nair's labour of love is truly inspiring, from the perspective of both biography-writing and writing history of science.” — Deepak Kumar, Historian of Science
“It is the definitive biography of an Indian woman botanist who made many notable contributions but who never received her due in her long career. With extensive archival and other research, Savithri Preetha Nair recreates, for the first time, the life and times of the pioneering E. K. Janaki Ammal and of her contemporaries. This is also a very fine contribution to the history of science in India in the twentieth century.” — Jairam Ramesh, MP, former Union Minister, and author






