Sunday, January 8, 2012
Poetry heard at JMM
Poets who submitted work in advance and were on the "Poetry with Mathematics" program included:
Jacqueline Lapidus, Judith Johnson, Rosanna Iembo (accompanied by the violin of her daughter Irene Iaccarino), Charlotte Henderson, Carol Dorf (read by Elizabeth Langosy), Sandra Coleman, Marion Cohen, Tatiana Bonch (read by John Hiigli), Harry Baker (via video presented by reading organizer Gizem Karaali -- an editor of the online Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, which sponsored the the reading), and JoAnne Growney (also an organizer of the reading).
Participants during an "open reading" included:
Mary Buchinger, Chris Caragianis, Rip Coleman, Seth Goldberg, Joshua Holden, Ann Perbohner, Pedro Poitevin, and Jason Samuels.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Poetry at JMM -- groups, etc.
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Poems of set paradox and spatial dimension
One gigantic set made of all that there is
Boggles the mind with paradoxes.
For it is greater than all, but smaller than this —
The set which consists of the subsets of it.
Wednesday, August 28, 2019
The personal becomes mathematical -- in poetry
Between You and the Root of Two by Sandra DeLozier Coleman
I have less chance of knowing you
than of writing out the root of two.
How e're I start, it never ends,
exploring how love lies, pretends.
Monday, December 13, 2021
Mathematician with the Soul of a Poet
One of my long-time math-poetry connections has been with math-teacher-artist-writer Sandra DeLozier Coleman (This link leads to her prior appearances in this blog.) Coleman has had a long-term interest in the Russian mathematician-and-poet Sofia Kovalevskaya (1850-1891) and has recently published Mathematician with the Soul of a Poet -- Poems and Plays of Sofia Kovalevskaya (Bohannon Hall Press, 2021, available here from amazon.com); this volume that contains Coleman's translations from Russian along with background and thoughtful commentary. The opening section of the book begins with these words from Kovalevskaya:
I understand that you are surprised I can work at the same time
in both literature and mathematics. Many who have not had the
chance to learn more about mathematics confuse it with arithmetic
and consider it to be a dry and arid science. In truth, however,
this science requires the greatest imagination, and one of the most
respected mathematicians of our century has very rightly said
that it is not possible to be a great mathematician without having
the soul of a poet. S V. Kovalevskaya
Thank you, Sandy Coleman, for sharing Kovalevskaya's words with us!
Saturday, April 5, 2014
Logic in limericks
The Implications of Logic by Sandra DeLozier Coleman
That p --> q is true,
Doesn’t say very much about q.
For if p should be false,
Then there’s really no loss
In assuming that q could be, too.
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Poetry-with-math, Jan 17, Baltimore
Room 308 Baltimore Convention Center