95 Quotes by Margot Lee Shetterly
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
My dad worked at NASA his whole career; he's a research scientist.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
I knew a lot of black scientists, engineers, and mathematicians, and female mathematicians and engineers, women of all backgrounds. So this idea that anyone could be an engineer, a mathematician, or whatever, was something that I had grown up with and thought was really normal.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
I feel like, in a lot of ways, 'Hidden Figures' is the book that I wrote and have been waiting to read since I learned to read.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
As much as I think it is necessary and desirable for white people to have an expanded view of the black American experience, it's probably even more important for black people to have that expanded view.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
That's what 'Star Trek' was: We don't know how to make an ideal society, but we're going to portray that, and then we're going to work backward. I think that's why science fiction - despite the dystopian parts - comes out of this super ideal that, eventually, we will get to some better place where we actually live up to our ideals.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
Every time you go to an airport and get on a plane, you are basically taking advantage of the work that was done at Langley. Between World War I and World War II, they did just tremendous amount of fundamental research into basically making airplanes safer, making them more stable.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
During World War II, hundreds of thousands of people actually - and among them many African-American - migrated to the Hampton Roads area because of the job boom that was happening. It was a place where you could get stable war jobs.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
The Russians had got a real head-start into space; America was playing catch-up.
- Share
- Author Margot Lee Shetterly
-
Quote
For too long, history has imposed a binary condition on its black citizens: either nameless or renowned, menial or exceptional, passive recipients of the forces of history or superheroes who acquire mythic status not just because of their deeds but because of their scarcity.
- Share