Showing posts with label Sean Cotter. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sean Cotter. Show all posts
Monday, April 18, 2016
Monday, November 12, 2012
Finding fault with a sphere . . .
On November 9 I had the pleasure (hosted by Irina Mitrea and Maria Lorenz) of talking ("Thirteen Ways that Math and Poetry Connect") with the Math Club at Temple University and, on November 5, I visited Marion Cohen's "Mathematics in Literature" class at Arcadia University. THANKS for these good times.
This
Fib
poem
says THANK-YOU
to all those students
from Arcadia and Temple
who participated in "math-poetry" with me --
who held forth with sonnets, pantoums,
squares, snowballs, and Fibs --
poetry
that rests
on
math.
My Temple host, Irina Mitrea, and I share something else besides being women who love mathematics -- the Romanian poet, Nichita Stanescu (1933-83), is a favorite for both of us. My October 23 posting ("On the Life of Ptolemy") offered one of Sean Cotter's recently published translations of poems by Stanescu and below I include more Stanescu-via-Cotter -- namely, two of the ten sections of "An Argument with Euclid." These stanzas illustrate Stanescu at his best -- irreverently using mathematical terminology and expressing articulate anger at seen and unseen powers of oppression.
This
Fib
poem
says THANK-YOU
to all those students
from Arcadia and Temple
who participated in "math-poetry" with me --
who held forth with sonnets, pantoums,
squares, snowballs, and Fibs --
poetry
that rests
on
math.
My Temple host, Irina Mitrea, and I share something else besides being women who love mathematics -- the Romanian poet, Nichita Stanescu (1933-83), is a favorite for both of us. My October 23 posting ("On the Life of Ptolemy") offered one of Sean Cotter's recently published translations of poems by Stanescu and below I include more Stanescu-via-Cotter -- namely, two of the ten sections of "An Argument with Euclid." These stanzas illustrate Stanescu at his best -- irreverently using mathematical terminology and expressing articulate anger at seen and unseen powers of oppression.
Labels:
Arcadia,
argument,
cube,
economy,
Euclid,
freedom,
Irina Mitrea,
Maria Lorenz,
Marion Cohen,
maximum,
minimum,
Nichita Stanescu,
poetry,
postulate,
Sean Cotter,
space,
sphere,
square,
Temple,
women
Tuesday, October 23, 2012
"On the Life of Ptolemy"
Poetry at its best uses words in new ways. Mathematics sometimes does that also. But for a poet to use mathematical terms in new ways can be risky. Nichita Stanescu (Romania, 1933 - 1983) was a poet unafraid to take that risk. Here is Sean Cotter's translation of Stanescu's "On the Life of Ptolemy" from the new and fine Stanescu collection, Wheel with a Single Spoke.
On the Life of Ptolemy by Nichita Stanescu
Ptolemy believed in the straight line,
It exists.
Count its points and, if you can,
tell me the number.
On the Life of Ptolemy by Nichita Stanescu
Ptolemy believed in the straight line,
It exists.
Count its points and, if you can,
tell me the number.
Labels:
mathematics,
Nichita Stanescu,
number,
poetry,
points,
Ptolemy,
Sean Cotter,
straight line
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Ritual by Nichita Stanescu (trans. Sean Cotter)
I cry before the number five --
the last supper, minus six.