Tuesday, September 3, 2013
Poetry-with-math in Baltimore -- 17 Jan 2014
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Poetry at JMM -- in Boston 6-Jan-2012
The Journal of Humanistic Mathematics will host a reading of poetry-with-mathematics on Friday, January 6, 5-7 PM in Boston’s Hynes Convention Center at the annual Joint Mathematics Meetings. Reading organizers include JHM editors, Gizem Karaali and Mark Huber, and poetry-math blogger, JoAnne Growney. Although the reading is open to all, without pre-selected readers, we will prepare a written program of poets who submit their work by our December 1 deadline. Both mathematician-poets and others who use mathematics in their poems are invited to submit.
Sunday, January 6, 2013
Cities of Mathematics
2. Of the Power of Chess to Feed the Starved by Judith Johnson
Monday, August 5, 2024
BRIDGES Poetry -- and Clerihews
One of my favorite mathy publications is the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, an online peer-reviewed journal published twice yearly by the Claremont Colleges Library and edited by Mark Huber, Claremont McKenna College, and Gizem Karaali, Pomona College. The most recent issue -- (Vol. 14, issue 2), available online here. The screen-shot below shows the poetry-contents of this issue.
Friday, August 3, 2012
JHM -- many math poems
In the wake of the BRIDGES math-art conference at Towson University last week I also want to mention the lively blog posting about BRIDGES by Justin Lanier at Math Munch.
Sunday, May 25, 2014
How many grains of sand?
Divertimentum Ornithologicum by Pedro Poitevin
After Jorge Luis Borges's Argumentum Ornithologicum.
A synchrony of wings across the sky
is quavering its feathered beats of flight.
Their number is too high to count -- I try
Thursday, January 24, 2019
A Multi-Author Poem Celebrating Math-People
ideas unfold in space, time, and hearts.
Math is the language of everyone
Any part of everything began as a sum.
Monday, April 20, 2020
The Geometry of Love
Short story writer John Cheever (1912-1982) and JHM author Robert Haas explore (with some humor) the question: how can Euclidean geometry help us find our ideal world of truth and happiness. Read and enjoy!
Since this is a math-poetry blog, I add a tiny rhyme of mine:
The Geometry of Love
I like the intersection line
that your plane makes with mine.
For lots and lots more fiction-with-mathematics, visit this wonderful website maintained by Alex Kasman of the College of Charleston.
Wednesday, August 30, 2023
A Nine-Sided Diamond
One of my much-appreciated math-poetry connections is with Scott W. Williams, a Professor of Mathematics at SUNY Buffalo and author of many scholarly papers and many poems. In a recent issue of the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics (JHM) I found (and valued reading) his "Impossible Haiku" -- a series of Haiku-stanzas that play with the Collatz Conjecture -- an unproven belief that for any starting number these two steps, performed in appropriate succession, eventually reach the number 1:
If the number is odd, multiply by 3 and add 1; if the number is even, divide it by 2.
Williams' "Impossible Haiku" may be found at this link. Another mathy poem by Williams (found here at his website) that I especially value is the one that I offer below -- a poem dedicated to his mother.
THE NINE-SIDED DIAMOND by Scott Williams
Thursday, January 8, 2015
The Geometry of Winter, with Eagles
on Sunday, January 11 at Arlington's Iota Cafe.
for Phyllis
We spot them, first almost imaginary
thin pencil lines or scratches on our glasses.
The earth's disk flattens out
where this pale land becomes the bay,