As a child I wrote poems but abandoned the craft until many years later when I was a math professor; at that later time some of my poems related to ideas pertinent to my classroom. For Number Theory classes "A Mathematician's Nightmare" gave a story to the unsolved Collatz conjecture; in Abstract Algebra "My Dance Is Mathematics" gave the mathematical history a human component.
My editor-colleague (Strange Attractors), Sarah Glaz, also has used poems for teaching -- for example, "The enigmatic number e." And Marion Cohen brings many poems of her own and others into her college seminar course, "Truth & Beauty: Mathematics in Literature." Add a west-coaster to these east-coast poet-teachers -- this time a California-based contributor: teacher, poet, and blogger (Math Mama Writes) Sue VanHattum. VanHattum (or "Math Mama") is a community college math teacher interested in all levels of math learning. Some of her own poems and selections from other mathy poets are available at the Wikispace, MathPoetry, that she started and maintains. Here is the poet's recent revision of a poem from that site, a poem about the invention (or discovery?) of imaginary numbers.
Imaginary Numbers Do the Trick by Sue VanHattum
Showing posts with label complex number. Show all posts
Showing posts with label complex number. Show all posts
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Electronic poetry -- Stephanie Strickland
Computers offer new opportunities for poetry -- permitting new types of poems. Animated perhaps, or hypertext, or vast manuscripts of which we can see at most a fragment -- the possibilities are many. Stephanie Strickland is one of the pioneers of electronic literature -- and this post was sparked by my experiences at her presentations at Georgetown University on February 1.
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