Research Catalog

Oxygen : a play in two acts

Title
Oxygen : a play in two acts / by Carl Djerassi and Roald Hoffmann.
Author
Djerassi, Carl.
Publication
Weinheim ; New York : Wiley-VCH, ©2001.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library PS3554.J47 O99 2001Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
Hoffmann, Roald.
Description
vii, 119 pages : illustrations, facsimiles; 21 cm
Summary
"What is discovery? Why is it important to be first? These questions trouble the characters in 'Oxygen'. The action alternates between 1777 and 2001, the Centenary of the Nobel Prize, when the Nobel Foundation decides to inaugurate a 'retro-Nobel' award for discoveries that preceded the establishment of the Prize in 1901. The Foundation thinks this will be easy. In the good old days, wasn't science done for science's sake? Wasn't discovery simple, pure, and unalloyed by controversy, priority, claims, and hype? The Nobel Committee decides to reward the discovery of Oxygen, since that launched the Chemical Revolution. Lavoisier is a natural choice. But what about Scheele? What about Priestley? Didn't they first discover oxygen? The play brings the candidates and their wives to 1777 Stockholm at the invitation of King Gustav III. Through the scientists' wives, in a sauna and elsewhere, we learn of their lives and those of their husbands. Meanwhile in 2001, the Nobel Committee argues about the conflicting claims of the three men. The ethical issues around priority and discovery at the heart of this play are as timely today as they were in 1777. As are the ironies of revolutions: Lavoisier, the chemical revolutionary, is a political conservative, who loses his life in the Jacobin terror. Priestley, the political radical, is a chemical conservative. And Scheele just wants to run his pharmacy. He, the first man on earth to make oxygen, got least credit for it. Will that situation be repaired 230 years after his discovery?"--Inside front flap.
Subject
  • Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent, 1743-1794 > Drama
  • Priestley, Joseph, 1733-1804 > Drama
  • Scheele, Carl Wilhelm, 1742-1786 > Drama
  • Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent, 1743-1794
  • Priestley, Joseph, 1733-1804
  • Scheele, Carl Wilhelm, 1742-1786
  • Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent 1743-1794
  • Priestley, Joseph 1733-1804
  • Scheele, Carl Wilhelm 1742-1786
  • Lavoisier, Antoine Laurent, 1743-1794
  • Priestley, Joseph, 1733-1804
  • Scheele, Carl Wilhelm, 1742-1786
  • 1700-1799
  • Chemists > Drama
  • Nobel Prizes > Drama
  • Chemistry > History > 18th century > Drama
  • Discoveries in science > Drama
  • Oxygen > Drama
  • Nobel Prizes
  • Medicine in literature
  • Drama
  • Oxygen > history
  • Nobel Prize
  • Chemistry > history
  • Research > history
  • Medicine in Literature
  • Drama
  • plays (performing arts compositions)
  • drama (literary genre)
  • 18.06 Anglo-American literature
  • Medicine in literature
  • Chemistry
  • Chemists
  • Discoveries in science
  • Nobel Prizes
  • Oxygen
  • Entdeckung
  • Naturwissenschaften
  • Sauerstoff
  • Wettbewerbsverhalten
  • Science fiction > Drama
  • Prix nobel
  • Chimie > Biographie
  • Découvertes scientifiques > Histoire
  • Chimie > Histoire
  • Oxygène
  • Stockholm (Sweden) > Fiction
  • Sweden > Stockholm
Genre/Form
  • Fictional Work
  • novels.
  • Novels
  • Drama
  • Fiction
  • History
  • Drama (texts)
  • Novels.
  • Fiction.
  • Plays.
  • Romans.
Contents
By the same Authors. -- Foreword. -- Production History. -- Cast of Characters. -- Scene 1. -- Intermezzo 1. -- Scene 2. -- Intermezzo 2. -- Scene 3. -- Scene 4. -- Intermezzo 3. -- Scene 5. -- Scene 6. -- Scene 7. -- Scene 8. -- Scene 9. -- Intermezzo 4. -- Scene 10. -- Intermezzo 5. -- Scene 11. -- Scene 12. -- Acknowledgments.
ISBN
  • 3527304134
  • 9783527304134
LCCN
2001276314
OCLC
  • ocm46567633
  • 46567633
  • SCSB-1862474
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library