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==Legacy== McClintock was the subject of a 1983 biography by physicist [[Evelyn Fox Keller]], titled ''A Feeling for the Organism''. Keller argued that because McClintock felt like an outsider within her field, (in part, because of her sex) she was able to look at her scientific subjects from a perspective different from the dominant one, leading to several important insights.<ref>{{Cite book|title=A feeling for the organism: the life and work of Barbara McClintock|last1=Keller|first1=Evelyn Fox|year=1993|orig-date=1983|publisher=W.H. Freeman|isbn=0-8050-7458-9|edition=10th anniversary|location=New York|oclc=29715247}}</ref> Keller shows how this led many of her colleagues to reject her ideas and undermine her abilities for many years. For example, when McClintock presented her findings that the genetics of maize did not conform to Mendelian distributions, geneticist [[Sewall Wright]] expressed the belief that she did not understand the underlying mathematics of her work, a belief he had also expressed towards other women at the time.{{sfn|Esther Lederberg}} In addition, geneticist [[Charlotte Auerbach|Lotte Auerbach]] recounted that [[Joshua Lederberg]] returned from a visit to McClintock's lab with the remark: 'By God, that woman is either crazy or a genius.' " As Auerbach recounts, McClintock had thrown Lederberg and his colleagues out after half an hour 'because of their arrogance. She was intolerant of arrogance ... She felt she had crossed a desert alone and no one had followed her.'"{{sfn|Keller|1983|p=142}}{{sfn|Esther Lederberg Colleagues}} In 2001, a second biography by science historian [[Nathaniel C. Comfort]]'s ''The Tangled Field: Barbara McClintock's Search for the Patterns of Genetic Control'' challenged this narrative. Comfort's biography contests the claim that McClintock was marginalized by other scientists, which he calls the "McClintock Myth" and argues was perpetuated both by McClintock herself as well as in the earlier biography by Keller. Comfort, however, asserts that McClintock was not discriminated against because of her gender, citing that she was well regarded by her professional peers, even in the early years of her career.{{sfn|Comfort|1999}} Many recent biographical works on women in science feature accounts of McClintock's work and experience. She is held up as a role model for girls in such works of children's literature as Edith Hope Fine's ''Barbara McClintock, Nobel Prize Geneticist'', Deborah Heiligman's ''Barbara McClintock: Alone in Her Field'' and Mary Kittredge's ''Barbara McClintock''. A recent biography for young adults by Naomi Pasachoff, ''Barbara McClintock, Genius of Genetics'', provides a new perspective, based on the current literature.{{sfn|Pasachoff|2006}} The most recent biography of the life and work of Barbara McClintock was published by Lee B. Kass and issued in June 2024 (Kass 2024). On May 4, 2005, the [[United States Postal Service]] issued the "American Scientists" commemorative postage stamp series, a set of four 37-cent self-adhesive stamps in several configurations. The scientists depicted were Barbara McClintock, [[John von Neumann]], [[Josiah Willard Gibbs]], and [[Richard Feynman]]. McClintock was also featured in a 1989 four-stamp issue from Sweden which illustrated the work of eight Nobel Prize-winning geneticists. A laboratory building at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory were named for her. A street has been named after her in the new "[[Adlershof#Development|Adlershof Development Society]]" science park in [[Berlin]].{{sfn|Berlin}} [[File:Barbara McClintock Hall, Cornell University.jpg|thumb|right|upright=.8|Barbara McClintock Hall at [[Cornell University]]]] A 103,835 square-foot residence hall at [[Cornell University]] was named for McClintock in 2022.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Barbara McClintock Hall |url=https://scl.cornell.edu/residential-life/housing/campus-housing/first-year-undergraduates/residence-halls/barbara-mcclintock-hall |access-date=October 24, 2022 |website=Student & Campus Life {{!}} Cornell University |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=3225-Barbara McClintock Hall Facility Information |url=https://www.fs.cornell.edu/fs/facinfo/fs_facilinfo.cfm?facil_cd=3225 |website=Facilities and Campus Services |access-date=June 27, 2023}}</ref> Some of McClintock's personality and scientific achievements were referred to in [[Jeffrey Eugenides]]'s 2011 novel ''[[The Marriage Plot]],'' which tells the story of a [[yeast]] geneticist named Leonard who has [[bipolar disorder]]. He works at a laboratory loosely based on Cold Spring Harbor. The character reminiscent of McClintock is a reclusive geneticist at the fictional laboratory, who makes the same discoveries as her factual counterpart.{{sfn|Kolata|2012}} Judith Pratt wrote a play about McClintock, called MAIZE, which was read at Artemesia Theatre in Chicago in 2015, and was produced in Ithaca NY, the home of Cornell University, in February–March 2018.<ref>{{cite news |title=MAIZE, a play about Barbara McClintock |url=https://events.cornell.edu/event/maize_a_play_about_barbara_mcclintock |access-date=November 21, 2019 |work=Cornell University |date=March 24, 2018 |language=en}}</ref> {{clear}}
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