Sunday, July 16, 2017
Too soon -- Maryam Mirzakhani taken by cancer
It
is fun --
like solving
a puzzle or
connecting the dots
in a detective case.
This stanza-form, in which lines grow in length by one syllable at a time, is called a syllable-snowball.
Tuesday, October 3, 2023
Celebrating a WINNING Woman!
The International Congress of Mathematicians meets every four years (next in 2026) and, at these meetings, awards the Fields Medal -- an award given to two or three or four outstanding mathematicians aged 40 or younger. The year 2014 was the first in which a woman won this medal -- "For her outstanding contributions to the dynamics and geometry of Riemann surfaces and their moduli spaces." -- she was Maryam Mirzakhani (1977-2017) -- who died too young of breast cancer.
In her collection, Mathematics for Ladies: Poems on Women in Science (Goldsmiths Press, 2022), Jessy Randall has a poem that celebrates Mirzakhani -- and I offer it below.
MARYAM MIRZAKHANI (1977-2017) by Jessy Randall
Wednesday, March 8, 2017
Honor Math-Women ...
Moon Duchin, a Tufts University professor who is using geometry to fight gerrymandering.
Cathy O'Neil, a data scientist (and blogger at mathbabe.org) whose recent book Weapons of Math Destruction helps readers to understand the roles (and threats) of big data in our society.
Thursday, April 21, 2016
Women in Mathematics Count!
For still more, visit my 2015 post "The culture for women in math and the sciences"; additionally, a search of this blog using "math women" will lead to a host of names and links. Enjoy!
Here are the closing lines of a poem of mine about the brilliant mathematician, Emmy Noether (1883-1935):
In spite of Emmy's talents,
always there were reasons
not to give her rank
or permanent employment.
She's a pacifist, a woman.
She's a woman and a Jew.
Her abstract thinking
is female and abstruse.
Today, history books proclaim that Noether
is the greatest mathematician
her sex has produced. They say she was good
for a woman.
Monday, February 28, 2022
A Picture is worth 1000 words . . .
Tomorrow, March 1, we begin Women's History Month. Join in celebration of math people with the Mathematician Poster Project -- a poster series featuring modern mathematical role models, created by a group of math graduate students and alumni. All files are freely downloadable below, for sharing either online or in print. The project is new and growing -- in the first six available posters, math-women featured therein include Pamela Harris, Maryam Mirzakhani (1977-2017), and Julia Robinson (1919-1985).
Each of the posters contains a few words of wisdom that are, in their way, poetic. Here are words from Pamela Harris: Mathematical
discovery brings me
great joy, yet I am
far more than the
theorems I prove.
These two links -- Mirzakhani and Robinson -- lead to other postings in this blog that have included these math-women.
Friday, August 15, 2014
My best dream is floating . . .
With the help of a "Google Alert" I found a YouTube video of Alexandria Marie reading "The Mathematics of Heartbreak" at a Dallas Poetry Slam. A link in an email from Texas computer scientist, Dylan Shell, alerted me to these mathematical lyrics (new words for old tunes) in a mathbabe posting by Cathy O'Neil.
As we have been floating from topic to topic, it may be apt to end with the final stanza of my relevantly titled poem:
Thursday, July 7, 2022
Poetry and the Fields Medal
It has been exciting to learn that a woman -- Maryna Viazovska of Ukraine -- has won a Fields Medal (often called "the Nobel prize of mathematics"); Viazovska is one of four persons who have been recognized (announced on June 5) for her outstanding contributions to mathematics. Fields medals were first awarded in 1936 and are awarded every four years to up to four mathematicians under the age of forty. The only other female mathematician who has received this award was Maryam Mirzakhani in 2014.
One of my syllable-squares |
Also of much interest to me concerning this year's Fields Medal winners is that one of them, June Huh, was in high school interested in becoming a poet -- and dropped out of school to pursue that goal. Later, however, in his university years, Huh began to see his future in mathematics.
Tuesday, January 16, 2018
Blog history -- title, links for previous posts . . .
Scroll through the titles below, browsing to find items of interest
among the more-than-nine-hundred postings since March 2010
OR
Click on any label -- a list is found in the right-hand column below the author profile
OR
Enter term(s) in the SEARCH box -- and find all posts containing those terms.
For example, here is a link to the results of a SEARCH using math women
And here is a link to a poem by Brian McCabe that celebrates math-woman Sophie Germain.
This link reaches a poem by Joan Cannon that laments her math-anxiety.
This poem expresses some of my own divided feelings.