Word Cloud for this blog -- created at https://tagcrowd.com. |
Monday, March 23, 2020
Celebrating 10 Years of Math-Poetry Blogging
This blog's first posting, "Poetry of Logical Ideas" -- found here, occurred ten years ago today on March 23, 2010. This link leads to a list of topics, poets, and mathematicians contained in the 1200+ postings made since then.
Thursday, March 19, 2020
Honor World Poetry Day on 3/21 with a Math Poem
On March 21 each year, UNESCO World Poetry Day!
Browsing down through this blog will lead you to lots of poems to read to celebrate that special day. In addition, here's something new -- I offer below part of a fine poem that I recently found again in an old collection, Verse and Universe, (Edited by Kurt Brown, Milkweed Editions, 1998). from Reasons for Numbers by Lisel Mueller (1924-2020)
1
Because I exist
2
Because there must be a reason
why I should cast a shadow
3
So that good can try to be better
and become best
and beginning grow into middle and end
Tuesday, March 17, 2020
What does this math-poetry blog contain?
An alphabetical list of TOPICS
and NAMES of all of the poets and mathematicians
cited in this blog is available here.
Monday, March 16, 2020
Keeping Track -- poetry with numbers
The very fine poetry of Jane Hirshfield has been featured in several earlier blog postings. And below, again -- with some lines from "Ledger," the title poem for her new collection, out this month. These lines find, as Hirshfield often does, both life-truths and poetry in numbers.
Ledger by Jane Hirshfield
Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin is 3,592 measures.
A voice kept far from feeling is heard as measured.
What’s wanted in desperate times are desperate measures.
Pushkin’s unfinished Onegin: 5,446 lines.
Ledger by Jane Hirshfield
Tchaikovsky’s Eugene Onegin is 3,592 measures.
A voice kept far from feeling is heard as measured.
What’s wanted in desperate times are desperate measures.
Pushkin’s unfinished Onegin: 5,446 lines.
Wednesday, March 11, 2020
Observe Pi-Day by writing in Pilish
Many poets use constraints to shape their writing but few are as constrained as mathematician Mike Keith who has written many works in Pilish -- that is, a language in which the flow of words have lengths that follow the digits of Pi. In honor of 2020's Pi-Day on 3.14, I have developed a small bit of Pilish, a poem of sorts, which I offer below.
Entering the term "Pilish" into this blog's SEARCH box finds these earlier postings that celebrate Pi.
The first 50 decimal digits are 3.14159265358979323846264338327950288419716939937510 . . .
Monday, March 9, 2020
"Numbers and Faces" and 23 more math poems
"Numbers and Faces" is the title of a poem by W. H. Auden -- and I also have used it as the title of a collection of poems that I gathered into a small anthology for the Humanistic Mathematics Network in 2001. The collection is out of print BUT is available here as a pdf -- and the Table of Contents is shown below:
Wednesday, March 4, 2020
Learn of MATH WOMEN in POEMS!
INTERNATIONAL DAY OF THE WOMAN
Sunday, March 8, 2020
Often it is difficult to find time for history in mathematics courses. One rather concise way that some of us introduce math personalities into the classroom is through poetry. Today, as part of Women's History Month, I offer links back to a sample of poems in previous postings that celebrate math-women.Amalie "Emmy" Noether (1882–1935)
Following stanzas about Noether's life and achievements, the poem ends with these lines:
Today, history books proclaim that Noether
is the greatest mathematician
her sex has produced. They say she was good
for a woman.
Monday, March 2, 2020
New math poems -- recently found online
A couple of days ago an email brought me the Table of Contents of the latest issue (Vol. 42, Issue 1) of The Mathematical Intelligencer -- and it had links to two poems that I hope that you also will enjoy.
First was "The Day I Receive My Ph.D." by Arkaye Kierulf of Cornell University. Kierulf's poem begins with these lines:
I’ll head out into the streets to hand out
My dissertation abstract like discount-hotel flyers.
Additional very rich sources of mathematical poetry are the twice-yearly issues of the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics (online here). The latest issue (January 2020) contains a folder of Statistical Poetry by Larry Lesser (many of Lesser's poems also are featured in this blog), and five additional poems:
"Perfect (a poem)" by Joseph Chaney, "A Letter to Niccolò Fontana de Brescia" by Jessica Huey, "The Empress's Nose: A Parable, After Feynman" by Robert Dawson, "SIGINT signifier" by Terry Trowbridge, and "The Master Oiler" by Ernesto Estrada.
First was "The Day I Receive My Ph.D." by Arkaye Kierulf of Cornell University. Kierulf's poem begins with these lines:
I’ll head out into the streets to hand out
My dissertation abstract like discount-hotel flyers.
For Christmas I’ll send copies of my diploma to . . .
For Kierulf's complete poem go here.
Also in this same issue of the Intelligencer -- and available at this link -- is the poem, "Remembering e" by Robert J. MacG. Dawson of Halifax University in Nova Scotia. Dawson's math-poetry has been featured in several previous posting's in this blog. Visit and enjoy!Additional very rich sources of mathematical poetry are the twice-yearly issues of the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics (online here). The latest issue (January 2020) contains a folder of Statistical Poetry by Larry Lesser (many of Lesser's poems also are featured in this blog), and five additional poems:
"Perfect (a poem)" by Joseph Chaney, "A Letter to Niccolò Fontana de Brescia" by Jessica Huey, "The Empress's Nose: A Parable, After Feynman" by Robert Dawson, "SIGINT signifier" by Terry Trowbridge, and "The Master Oiler" by Ernesto Estrada.
Wednesday, February 26, 2020
A MATH WOMAN acrostic poem
Can one describe a MATH WOMAN in 9 words?
and, what if those words' first letters must spell MATH WOMAN?
Try it -- it's fun!
and, what if those words' first letters must spell MATH WOMAN?
Try it -- it's fun!
A xioms
T risects
H yperbolas
W rites
O rthogonal
M atrices
A voids
N egatives
Monday, February 24, 2020
Counting syllables, considering snowflakes
From Larry Lesser, a professor at The University of Texas at El Paso (a researcher in math education) and a poet and songwriter and friend, today's poem offers a thoughtful reflection on the properties of a snowflake--and the fragility of thought and weather patterns. But first (and also from Lesser), here's a clever "2019" stanza
(in which each line has the number of syllables of the corresponding digit in that year):
Silence
is
sometimes the strongest thing we can say.
SNOWFLAKE by Lawrence Mark Lesser
Some say
‘‘no two alike’’,
others say
‘‘not too alike’’.
Silence
is
sometimes the strongest thing we can say.
SNOWFLAKE by Lawrence Mark Lesser
Some say
‘‘no two alike’’,
others say
‘‘not too alike’’.
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
Which order is best -- or should I try them all?
This posting celebrates a new poetry collection --
Ringing the Changes by Stephanie Strickland
(Counterpath, 2020).
(Counterpath, 2020).
This new collection starts with an idea from bell-ringing. Some city towers have marvelous-sounding bells -- and sometimes these bells ring wonderful concerts for nearby inhabitants. One of the traditional bell-ringing activities is called "ringing the changes" in which a collection of n bells are rung, in sequence, in all of the possible n-factorial bell-orders. (Here, at Strickland's website, are some links to information about the art of bell-ringing.)
BUT, what if the goal were not to ring bells in sequence
but to generate (for a reader) sequences of words (thoughtful poetic phrases)?
This sort of art is what Strickland brings to us in Ringing the Changes.
Monday, February 17, 2020
Those trains in word problems -- who rides them?
A Problem in a Math Book by Yehuda Amichai (1924-2000)
I remember a problem in a math book
about a train that leaves from place A and another train
that leaves from place B. When will they meet?
And no one ever asked what happens when they meet:
will they stop or pass each other by, or maybe collide?
And none of the problems was about a man who leaves from place A
and a woman who leaves from place B. When will they meet,
I remember a problem in a math book
about a train that leaves from place A and another train
that leaves from place B. When will they meet?
And no one ever asked what happens when they meet:
will they stop or pass each other by, or maybe collide?
And none of the problems was about a man who leaves from place A
and a woman who leaves from place B. When will they meet,
Labels:
Chana Block,
Chana Kronfeld,
Yehuda Amichai
Tuesday, February 11, 2020
"Binary Heart" -- linking love and mathematics
From the xkcd webcomic by Randall Munroe -- and also shown on the cover of Strange Attractors: Poems of Love and Mathematics, we have this reminder of upcoming Valentine's Day.
Munroe's clever drawings "of romance, sarcasm, math, and language" have appeared also in previous postings in this blog (here's a link) and his website is fun to visit.
The anthology, Strange Attractors; Poems of Love and Mathematics-- edited by Sarah Glaz and me -- was published in 2008 by AK Peters and contains more than 150 poems of math and love (including another -- "Useless" -- by Munroe.) More about Munroe is available here.
"Binary Heart" by Randall Munroe, at https://xkcd.com/99/ |
The anthology, Strange Attractors; Poems of Love and Mathematics-- edited by Sarah Glaz and me -- was published in 2008 by AK Peters and contains more than 150 poems of math and love (including another -- "Useless" -- by Munroe.) More about Munroe is available here.
Sunday, February 9, 2020
Valentine's Day -- a time for Love and Mathematics
Perhaps you are looking for a mathy Valentine,
or a Valentine for a mathy person . . . or both.
This link leads to the results of a blog-search using VALENTINE
and offers lots of math-poetic possibilities.
Thursday, February 6, 2020
Welcome DIVERSITY in mathematics
As February on the calendar brings BLACK HISTORY month and March brings WOMEN'S HISTORY month, I invite you to explore the contributions of diverse groups to mathematics. In this blog, I celebrate links between a rainbow of math-people and poetry -- for example, in this posting, "Mathematicians are not just white dudes, (which includes links to math-poetry by Benjamin Banneker and Scott Williams).
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
Another prize-winning poem
It was not until after my posting yesterday that I got permission from the third of the winners in the AMS 2020 student poetry contest to post his work. Here is "The Number Won" by Austen Mazenko. (And here is a link to a YouTube video of the January 18 event in which each of the winning poets reads their winning poem.)
Austen is a high school senior from Greenwood Village, CO. He loves words, numbers, and their patterns--and looks forward to pursuing mathematics in college next year. |
THANK YOU to the American Mathematical Society for encouraging math-poetry!
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