Sunday, August 10, 2025

Celebrating Poetry at 2025 BRIDGES Conference

     A lavish and wonderful celebration of connections between mathematics and the arts is the annual international BRIDGES, Mathematics and the Arts ConferenceThis year's conference took place last month (July, 2025 in Eindhoven, Netherlands) and one of its special events was a poetry reading.  

     Information about the poets and sample poems are available here at the website of Sarah Glaz (mathematician-poet and coordinator of the BRIDGES readings).  Below I have included one of these very special poems:

View no Fiery Night        by Marian Christie 

No
one
went to   
the tower
to vie with the foe.
Fretting, worn, we rove in night fog ––
the ring, the theft, the vow forgotten. Hovering high
over the town, the frightening wyvern, whirr of her winging interwoven with fire.

Monday, August 4, 2025

Poetry in the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics

      Twice a year a new issue of the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics is published online; here is a link to the Table of Contests for the July, 2025 issue which I have recently enjoyed browsing.   This issue contains a plentiful variety of poems and articles related to poetry.  The term "Linear Poem" was a concept new to me -- found here in the article, "Introducing the Linear Poem" by Cristian Ramirez Rodriguez -- and I offer it below:

     Linear Poems
     Are poems where each line
     increases or deceases by the same number of 
     words every single line, this number is the slope, m, and
     the words in title are b (intercept); Here m is 3, b is 2.

The author goes on to tell how he has used this form with math students -- and he offers additional examples.