From Immigrant to Inventor explained

From Immigrant to Inventor is an autobiography by Mihajlo Pupin that won the 1924 Pulitzer Prize for Biography.[1]

Description

Pupin's book chronicles a lifelong journey of a boy from rural Serbia, who became one of the greatest scientists of the early 20th century.[2] [3]

The autobiography includes Pupin's childhood years in Banat, early immigrant struggles in the New York area, undergraduate studies at Columbia University, doctoral studies at the University of Cambridge and University of Berlin, and later life as a professor and researcher at Columbia University, where he made important discoveries in the fields of X-ray physics and telecommunications. It also reflects on his experience in various scientific and technical organizations, such as the American Institute of Electrical Engineers, American Mathematical Society, and American Physical Society, among others.[4] [5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Pulitzer Prizes.
  2. Web site: From Immigrant to Inventor | Columbia Alumni Association.
  3. Web site: Michael Idvorsky Pupin . 2024-09-27 . Norfolk Historical Society .
  4. Russell . Alexander . February 1924 . From Immigrant to Inventor . Nature . 113 . 2832 . 186–188 . 10.1038/113186a0 . 1476-4687.
  5. Book: Pupin, Michael Idvorsky . From immigrant to inventor . 1923 . New York, London, C. Scribner's Sons . Snell Library Northeastern University.