In 1981 Mary K Gaillard became the first woman on the physics faculty at
the University of California at Berkeley. Her career as a theoretical
physicist spanned the period from the inception -- in the late 1960s and
early 1970s -- of what is now known as the Standard Model of particle
physics and its experimental confirmation, culminating with the
discovery of the Higgs particle in 2012. A Singularly Unfeminine
Profession recounts Gaillard's experiences as a woman in a very
male-dominated field, while tracing the development of the Standard
Model as she witnessed it and participated in it. The generally
nurturing environment of her childhood and college years, as well as
experiences as an undergraduate in particle physics laboratories and as
a graduate student at Columbia University -- which cemented her passion
for particle physics -- left her unprepared for the difficulties that
she confronted as a second year graduate student in Paris, and later at
CERN, another particle physics laboratory near Geneva, Switzerland. The
development of the Standard Model, as well as attempts to go beyond it
and aspects of early universe physics, are described through the lens of
Gaillard's own work, in a language written for a lay audience.