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Stephanie Strickland

Stephanie Strickland (born February 22, 1942) is a poet living in New York City. She has published ten volumes of print poetry and co-authored twelve digital poems. Her files and papers[1] are being collected by the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book And Manuscript Library at Duke University.

Stephanie Strickland
photo by Star Black
BornFebruary 22, 1942
Detroit, Michigan
OccupationAuthor, poet
EducationHarvard University;
Sarah Lawrence College;
Pratt Institute
GenrePoetry, Digital Poetry, Essays

Life

Strickland was born in Detroit, lived for five years in Glen Ellyn, Illinois, and attended Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, New York. She studied at Harvard University (A.B. 1963), Sarah Lawrence College (M.F.A. 1979), and Pratt Institute (M.S. 1984).[2]

From 1978-1990, she worked at the Sarah Lawrence College Library as Head of Access Services, Automated Services Librarian, and Women's Studies Reference Specialist. She served on the Board of the Hudson Valley Writers’ Center from 1983-1995 and 1999-2005 and as editor at Slapering Hol Press from 1990-2005. She currently serves on the board of directors of the Electronic Literature Organization.

Strickland held the 2002 McEver Chair in Writing at the Georgia Institute of Technology[3] where she created, curated and produced the TechnoPoetry Festival 2002.[4] Other invited appointments have included Distinguished Visiting Writer at Boise State University; Hugo Visiting Writer at University of Montana Missoula, Visiting Poet in Residence at Columbia College Chicago; and Visiting Poet in Residence in the MFA-PhD program at the University of Utah. Strickland presented at the &NOW Festival in 2004,[5] 2006, 2008, 2009, and 2011, and frequently at the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts (SLSA).[6] She co-edited volume 1 of the Electronic Literature Organization's Electronic Literature Collection and the Fall 2007 issue of the Iowa Review Web, Multi-Modal Coding.

Works

Books of poetry

  • Ringing the Changes. Counterpath Press. 2020. ISBN 978-1-933996-71-4.
  • How the Universe Is Made, Poems New & Selected (1985-2019). Ahsahta Press. 2019. ISBN 978-1-934103-87-6.
  • V : WaveTercets / Losing L'una. SpringGun Press. 2014. ISBN 978-0-9832218-8-3.
  • Dragon Logic. Ahsahta Press. 2013. ISBN 978-1934103456.
  • Zone : Zero. Ahsahta Press. 2008. ISBN 978-1-934103-01-2.
  • V : WaveSon.nets / Losing L'una. Penguin Books. 2002. ISBN 978-0-14-200245-2.
  • True North. University of Notre Dame Press. 1997. ISBN 978-0-268-01899-3.
  • The Red Virgin: A Poem of Simone Weil. University of Wisconsin Press. 1993. ISBN 978-0-299-13994-0.
  • Give the Body Back. University of Missouri Press. 1991. ISBN 978-0-8262-0809-5.
  • Beyond This Silence. State Street Press. 1986.

Works of trans-medial, electronic, and digital literature

  • Liberty Ring!. 2020. With Ian Hatcher. First published in Nokturno.
  • Hours of the Night. 2016. With M.D. Coverley. First exhibited at ELO2016.
  • House of Trust. 2014. With Ian Hatcher. The Volta: Evening Will Come, Issue 44, August 2014.
  • Vniverse iPad app. 2015. With Ian Hatcher.
  • Duels-Duets. 2013. With Nick Montfort. New Binary Press, 2014.
  • Sea and Spar Between. 2010. With Nick Montfort. Dear Navigator issue 1:3, Winter 2010. (Also online: how to read the work and an archived copy of its original introductory page.)
  • slippingglimpse. 2007. With Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo[7] and Paul Ryan.[8]
  • V : Vniverse. 2002. With Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo.[7] The Iowa Review Web, 2002.
  • Errand Upon Which We Came. 2001. With M.D. Coverley.[9] Cauldron & Net 3, 2000-2001.
  • The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot. Word Circuits. 1999.
  • To Be Here as Stone Is. 1999. With M.D. Coverley.[10] Riding the Meridian volume 1 no. 2, 1999.
  • True North (hypertext). Eastgate Systems. 1997. ISBN 1-884511-36-8.

Resources for study of Strickland's early works include:

  • Strickland recorded a reading from slippingglimpse during "A Toast to the Flash Generation" on December 31, 2020, sponsored by the Electronic Literature Organization, as Adobe Flash ceased working in web browsers.[11]
  • Patricia Tomaszek has recorded a screencast[12] of Errand Upon Which We Came that includes an interview with Strickland.
  • Dene Grigar and her team at Washington State University Vancouver host documentation related to True North including a traversal of the hypertext, social media content, photos, the author's prologue to the traversal, and an essay by Grigar.[13]

Essays

Essays by Strickland include:

  • Late to the Party in Chapter One: On Becoming a Poet, Marsh Hawk Press, 2020.
  • Joined at the Hip: Simone Weil, Quentin Meillassoux in Religion & Literature 45.3. (Autumn 2013 issue, appeared in 2015.)
  • Spars of Language Lost at Sea, with Nick Montfort. Electronic Literature Organization conference paper, Paris, 2013. Formules 18, 2014.
  • cut to fit the tool-spun course, with Nick Montfort. Digital Humanities Quarterly 7.1, 2013.
  • Poetry & the Digital World, English Language Notes 47.1 Special Issue: Experimental Literary Education, 2009; reprinted in Hidden Agendas: Unreported Poetics, Louis Armand, editor. Litteraria Pragensia Books. Prague, Czech Republic, 2010.
  • Born Digital. Poetry Foundation, 2009.
  • Dovetailing Details Fly Apart - All Over Again, In Code, In Poetry, In Chreods,[14] with Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo, 2007; introduced by Joseph Tabbi, with additional links, in electronic book review, 2007.
  • Quantum Poetics: Six Thoughts, in Media Poetry: An International Anthology. Eduardo Kac, editor. Intellect Press, Bristol, UK, 2007.
  • Writing the Virtual: Eleven Dimensions of E-Poetry. Leonardo Electronic Almanac special issue on New Media Poetry and Poetics, Vol 14 No. 5 - 6, 2006.
  • Possibilities of Being: Poetry Speaking with Science. Isotope 4.1, Spring-Summer 2006.
  • Poetry in the Electronic Environment. electronic book review, 2005.
  • Moving Through Me as I Move: A Paradigm for Interaction. First Person: New Media as Story, Performance and Game. Wardrip-Fruin, N. and Harrigan, P., editors. MIT Press, 2004.

Interviews

CUNY-based Dichtung Yammer[15] has published an extended interview of Strickland by Ian Hatcher, "Exchange On Stephanie Strickland's How the Universe Is Made: Poems New & Selected, 1985-2019 and Ringing the Changes."[16]

A recent interview in print is The CounterText Interview: Stephanie Strickland, conducted by Mario Aquilina and Ivan Callus. It appears in CounterText, Volume 2 Issue 2, pp 113–129, ISSN 2056-4406, Edinburgh University Press, 2016.

Audio interviews that primarily discuss the poems in Dragon Logic have been recorded by Kylan Rice[17] for likewise audio, Tony Trigilio[18] for Radio Free Albion, and Eric LeMay[19] for New Books in Literature.

Journals and anthologies

Strickland's poems have appeared in more than 90 journals, including The Paris Review, Grand Street, New American Writing, Ploughshares, jubilat, Chicago Review, Boston Review, Denver Quarterly, Fence, LIT, Chain, Harvard Review, 1913 a journal of forms, The Iowa Review, Colorado Review, Black Clock, Vlak, Western Humanities Review, and Conditions.[20]

Strickland's print poems have appeared in anthologies such as Four Quartets: Poetry in the Pandemic (2020), Poetics for the More-than-Human World (2020), Devouring the Green: Fear of a Human Planet (2015), Best American Poetry (2013), Electronic Literature Collection/2 (2011), The &NOW Awards: The Best Innovative Writing (2009), The Notre Dame Review: The First Ten Years (2009), Strange attractors: poems of love and mathematics (Sarah Glaz, editor, A K Peters, Ltd. 2008), and A Sing Economy, Flim Forum Anthology 2 (2008).

Online, Strickland's poems have been published by The Poetry Foundation, The Iowa Review Web, MiPOesias, Octopus, Drunken Boat, Poetry Daily, Sous Rature, Mad Hatters’ Review, Saint Elizabeth Street, Critiphoria, La Fovea, Hyperrhiz: New Media Cultures, Riding the Meridian, Cauldron & Net, Web Del Sol Editor’ s Picks, electronic book review, Word Circuits Gallery, Blue Moon, The New River, Furtherfield, Poets for Living Waters, Codex: A Journal of Critical and Creative Writing for your Mobile Device, and Big Other.[20]

After their first appearance, Strickland's electronic works have been republished. Sea and Spar Between was included in Rattapallax 21: Current State of Poetry Generators (2013), Bibliotheca Invisibilis: Conceptualizations of the Invisible (2014), and (in Polish) TechSty 2014, n.1 (9) (2014). slippingglimpse was included in hyperrhiz: new media cultures no. 4 (2008), Poets for Living Waters (2010), The Electronic Literature Collection Volume 2 (2011), and Rattapallax 21: Current State of Poetry Generators (2013). V : Vniverse was included in The Electronic Literature Collection Volume 2 (2011).

Strickland's work has been included in remixes. For example, "Versus Vega: Precessing" by Jason Nelson (Furtherfield, 2005) incorporates elements of Strickland's work, and the JavaScript code from Sea and Spar Between was used by Mark Sample to create House of Leaves of Grass.

Critical reception

For the 2022 Critical Code Studies Working Group, Carly Schnitzler wrote, "Because the Ringing [of] the Changes is automated, permutable, and ongoing, with Strickland and her team of programmers setting it into motion and simply letting it run, it seems to act as a force for and representative of reality, constant reminders that things (our society’s treatment of the environment, of structural inequity and violence ...) need to change, regardless of if we (any humans engaged with the work—producers or consumers ...) are paying attention to them or not. Looking at and playing with the underlying code, though, seems to complicate this initial read of the role of human attention in (and to) the piece, with divisions emerging (as they do) around form and content."[21]

In electronic book review, Lai-Tse Fan explained the impact of Ringing the Changes: "Strickland continues the tradition of poetic text generation, engaging at the same with material constraints resulting from 17th century pattern-ringing. The practice consists of competing teams ringing church bells based on highly complex mathematical patterns. Building on these, the poet and her team created elaborate and complex algorithms that generate the poetry woven out of textual data harvested from writings of Sha Xin Wei, Simone Weil, Hito Steyerl, and Yuk Hui among others. Written with Python code, the work demonstrates the powerful 'poetics of juxtaposition', where the list of names of Black men and women subjected to state-sanctioned violence strongly resonates throughout the whole text."[22]

In the same publication, Sarah Whitcomb Laiola's review stated, "The textual data feeding this algorithm and surfacing, as poetry, according to mathematical patterns address a range of topics: reflections on art and media, histories of information and its categorization, lessons in computational logic and quantum physics, discussions of technologies and textiles, and narratives of storytelling and/as human movement. The poetry that emerges, then, is a deftly woven text/ile that brings together such disparate elements so that each might resonate beyond its own (con)textual limits."[22]

Reviewing Dragon Logic for The Common, Terese Svoboda wrote, "No poet has plumbed or plummed with her thumb so deeply into the pies (π's) of physics, math, and myth and made them interlock on the atomic level. She's brilliant, slyly funny and profound."[23] Other notable readings of the poems within Dragon Logic include Julie Marie Wade's review, "The Periscopic Poetics of Stephanie Strickland's Dragon Logic,"[24] for The Iowa Review, and Orchid Tierney's review, "Code as such,"[25] for Jacket2.

In a speech at the Library of Congress in 2013, Stuart Moulthrop called Sea and Spar Between, "possibly the greatest example of electronic literature yet attempted -- measured by volume, at least -- but arguably also on a scale of importance."[26] Michael Leong wrote, of Sea And Spar Between, "The output ... is a rich, combinatorial poem in its own right, but it also offers the productively defamiliarizing experience of reading Melville and Dickinson 'at a distance,' giving us a 'slant' perspective on two very familiar, canonical authors. ... We can say that Montfort and Strickland's poetics privileges neither the sea nor the spar but the between." [3]

Reviewing Zone : Zero, Djelloul Marbrook wrote, "For exploring the outer spaces of poetry Zone : Zero is practically a handbook. Placement is everything here. ... recalling as it does the profound commitment of so many medieval Arab, Berber and Jewish poets to mathematics and science. There is no earthly reason to segregate these disciplines other than for the convenience of popularizers who write about them." [27] Rachel Daley's review described how, "poetry as a practice is renewed as relevant, applicable, accessible, and understandable ... when it opens readers’ own mechanisms for reading language to a slightly unprecedented but shared capability. Stephanie Strickland's Zone : Zero enacts and constitutes this shift."[28]

In an essay citing slippingglimpse an example of socially distributed cognition, N. Katherine Hayles has described how slippingglimpse "is located within philosophical, technical, and aesthetic contexts that create a richer sense of information than the disembodied version that emerged from early cybernetics."[29]

In "Nature’s Agents: Chreods, Code, Plato, and Plants",[30] Lisa Swanstrom describes the effect of slippingglimpse: "...to make language look organic, to make these pieces of verse, in the tradition of the concrete poets and the image poets, crawl out of the sequential nature of written language in order to try on a different form. They remain words and phonemes beholden to English syntax, yes, but they also become part of a larger natural sign system, one comprised of water currents and chreodic patterns, algorithms and data flows."

In "Iteration, you see: Floating Text and Chaotic Reading/Viewing in slippingglimpse,"[31] Gwen Le Cor writes, "...by shedding the solidity of stable written text and presenting a liquid text in motion, slippingglimpse is also asking us to loosen our metaphors of writing, and discard the solidity that weaving metaphors imply. Text is no longer textile, it is texture, and in this particular case it is liquid texture."

In reviewing V: Wave.Son.Nets/Losing L'Una, Edward Falco described Strickland as, "urging readers to listen carefully, with body as well as mind, to see through the constructs the mind establishes to see into the world, to see what may be beyond mind, what the mind is not wired to see; and most of all to resist the static and hierarchical while accepting the fluid and enmeshed. In this sense, Strickland, like Dickinson before her, is a deeply spiritual poet, and one who, incidentally, is genuinely exploring the possibilities of digital writing to reshape the conventions of literature."[32]

Writing for The Iowa Review Web, Jaishree Odin analyzed The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot as follows: "Thematically, The Ballad is about unrequited love between Sand and Soot; at another level, it is about the art of navigation through multiple discourses that constitute human experience. In some ways, it also alludes to the computer-generated electronic spaces and humans who interact with these spaces. The sophisticated conception and design of this hypermedia work brings together a variety of discourses from art, science, mathematics, philosophy, and even mythology to create a weave of texts."[33]

In Contemporary Women's Writing, Sally Evans wrote of The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot, "...Sand as a figure of cyberfemininity is frequently described in ways that trouble the clear boundaries between the organic and electronic selves ... Significantly, Sand's hybridity also makes her excessive, a self beyond the neat categorizations of human or machine. She is a point of articulation between organic and inorganic matter, and her contact with Harry Soot serves to entangle further human qualities such as frailty and emotion with the supposedly infallible electronic world."[34]

Joseph Tabbi has written on True North, in Cognitive Fictions[35] and electronic book review: "Strickland's poetics of indirect citation, annotation, and recombination creates affinities with a distinctive (and mostly American) tradition that reaches back through Dickinson to Jonathan Edwards. Her willingness to court abstraction and a minimalist language (at the risk of occasional unreadability) opens what should be a fruitful conversation with the Language poets, while the recognition awarded True North by the judges for the Sandeen Prize ensures that her work will be welcomed into the domestic spaces of contemporary social realism no less than the more public-minded collectivities represented at meetings of the Modern Language Association and the Society for Literature, Science, and the Arts (where Strickland has given readings)."[36]

Originally written in Catalan, the detailed study Poesía Digital: Deena Larsen y Stephanie Strickland by Oreto Doménech i Masià was published in a Spanish translation by the University of Valencia in 2015.[37]

Awards and grants

Strickland has received awards from National Endowment for the Arts (Poetry) and National Endowment for the Humanities (Hypertext). She has received fellowships from the MacDowell Colony, Yaddo, Djerassi, and Ragdale.

References

  1. ^ "Guide to the Stephanie Strickland Papers, 1955-2016". David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-11. Retrieved 2011-01-24.
  3. ^ . Archived from the original on 2011-06-17. Retrieved 2011-01-24.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-10-04. Retrieved 2013-10-01.
  5. ^ . &Now 2004. University of Notre Dame. Archived from the original on 15 October 2012. Retrieved 29 June 2012.
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2014-08-31.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2012-10-16. Retrieved 2012-12-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. ^ "Earthscore by Paul Ryan". Earthscore.org. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  9. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  10. ^ [2][permanent dead link]
  11. ^ "A Toast to the Flash Generation".
  12. ^ ELMCIP (18 February 2014). "Artist-Screencast with Stephanie Strickland on "Errand Upon Which We Came"". Vimeo.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  13. ^ For more on traversals see Traversals: The Use of Preservation for Early Electronic Writing. MIT Press. 2017. ISBN 9780262035972.
  14. ^ "Welcome to nginx!". Archived from the original on 2014-08-31. Retrieved 2014-08-31.
  15. ^ "About Dichtung Yammer". 27 June 2016.
  16. ^ "Exchange on Stephanie Strickland's How the Universe is Made: Poems New & Selected, 1985-2019 and Ringing the Changes". January 2021.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-06-05.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  18. ^ "Radio Free Albion: Episode 16: Stephanie Strickland". Radiofreealbion.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-09-03. Retrieved 2014-09-01.
  20. ^ a b "Stephanie Strickland". Stephaniestrickland.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  21. ^ Schnitzler, Carly. "Ringing the Changes (2022 Code Critique)". Retrieved 20 February 2022.
  22. ^ a b Laiola, Sarah Whitcomb (31 October 2020). "A Review of Stephanie Strickland's Ringing the Changes › electronic book review". Retrieved 4 February 2021.
  23. ^ "INSTALL WETWARE DRAGON LOGIC | the Common". Archived from the original on 2014-06-05. Retrieved 2014-06-05.
  24. ^ "The Periscopic Poetics of Stephanie Strickland's DRAGON LOGIC - The Iowa Review". Iowareview.org. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  25. ^ "Code as such - Jacket2". Jacket2.org. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  26. ^ Moulthrop, Stuart. "Failure to Contain: Electronic Literature and the State (Machine) of Reading", delivered April 5, 2013 at the Library of Congress, Washington D.C.
  27. ^ "Galatea Resurrects #20 (A Poetry Engagement): AHSAHTA BOOKS by SUSAN TICHY, DAN BEACHY-QUICK, KATE GREENSTREET, STEPHANIE STRICKLAND, BRIAN TEARE, ANDREW GRACE and ELIZABETH ROBINSON". Galatearesurrection20.blogspot.com. 10 May 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  28. ^ "Jacket 37 - Early 2009 - Stephanie Strickland; "Zone : Zero", Ahsahta Press, 2008 reviewed by Rachel Daley". Jacketmagazine.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  29. ^ Hayles, N. Katherine. "Distributed Cognition at/in Work: Strickland, Lawson Jaramillo, and Ryan's slippingglimpse." Frame, vol. 21 no. 1 (2009), pp. 15-29
  30. ^ "Nature's Agents: Chreods, Code, Plato, and Plants – electronic book review". Electronicbookreview.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  31. ^ "Iteration, you see: Floating Text and Chaotic Reading/Viewing in slippingglimpse – electronic book review". Electronicbookreview.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  32. ^ "Review - V: Wave.Son.Nets/Losing L'Una, by Stephanie Strickland". Blackbird.vcu.edu. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  33. ^ . 24 February 2006. Archived from the original on 24 February 2006. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  34. ^ Evans, Sally. "The Patchwork Girl's Daughters: Cyberfemininity, Hybridity, and Excess in the Poetry of Stephanie Strickland and Mez Breeze." Contemporary Women's Writing, January 2016. Oxford University Press.
  35. ^ "Cognitive Fictions". University of Minnesota Press. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  36. ^ "A Migration Between Media – electronic book review". Electronicbookreview.com. Retrieved 1 September 2018.
  37. ^ . puv.uv.es. Archived from the original on 27 May 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)

External links

  • "Webliography: Stephanie Strickland", Sara Herbert, Virginia Commonwealth University
  • Poet's website
  • "An Interview with Stephanie Strickland", Bookslut, October 2008
  • [Usurped!], Ahsahta Press

stephanie, strickland, born, february, 1942, poet, living, york, city, published, volumes, print, poetry, authored, twelve, digital, poems, files, papers, being, collected, david, rubenstein, rare, book, manuscript, library, duke, university, photo, star, blac. Stephanie Strickland born February 22 1942 is a poet living in New York City She has published ten volumes of print poetry and co authored twelve digital poems Her files and papers 1 are being collected by the David M Rubenstein Rare Book And Manuscript Library at Duke University Stephanie Stricklandphoto by Star BlackBornFebruary 22 1942Detroit MichiganOccupationAuthor poetEducationHarvard University Sarah Lawrence College Pratt InstituteGenrePoetry Digital Poetry Essays Contents 1 Life 2 Works 2 1 Books of poetry 2 2 Works of trans medial electronic and digital literature 2 3 Essays 2 4 Interviews 2 5 Journals and anthologies 3 Critical reception 4 Awards and grants 5 References 6 External linksLife EditStrickland was born in Detroit lived for five years in Glen Ellyn Illinois and attended Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua New York She studied at Harvard University A B 1963 Sarah Lawrence College M F A 1979 and Pratt Institute M S 1984 2 From 1978 1990 she worked at the Sarah Lawrence College Library as Head of Access Services Automated Services Librarian and Women s Studies Reference Specialist She served on the Board of the Hudson Valley Writers Center from 1983 1995 and 1999 2005 and as editor at Slapering Hol Press from 1990 2005 She currently serves on the board of directors of the Electronic Literature Organization Strickland held the 2002 McEver Chair in Writing at the Georgia Institute of Technology 3 where she created curated and produced the TechnoPoetry Festival 2002 4 Other invited appointments have included Distinguished Visiting Writer at Boise State University Hugo Visiting Writer at University of Montana Missoula Visiting Poet in Residence at Columbia College Chicago and Visiting Poet in Residence in the MFA PhD program at the University of Utah Strickland presented at the amp NOW Festival in 2004 5 2006 2008 2009 and 2011 and frequently at the Society for Literature Science and the Arts SLSA 6 She co edited volume 1 of the Electronic Literature Organization s Electronic Literature Collection and the Fall 2007 issue of the Iowa Review Web Multi Modal Coding Works EditBooks of poetry Edit Ringing the Changes Counterpath Press 2020 ISBN 978 1 933996 71 4 How the Universe Is Made Poems New amp Selected 1985 2019 Ahsahta Press 2019 ISBN 978 1 934103 87 6 V WaveTercets Losing L una SpringGun Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 9832218 8 3 Dragon Logic Ahsahta Press 2013 ISBN 978 1934103456 Zone Zero Ahsahta Press 2008 ISBN 978 1 934103 01 2 V WaveSon nets Losing L una Penguin Books 2002 ISBN 978 0 14 200245 2 True North University of Notre Dame Press 1997 ISBN 978 0 268 01899 3 The Red Virgin A Poem of Simone Weil University of Wisconsin Press 1993 ISBN 978 0 299 13994 0 Give the Body Back University of Missouri Press 1991 ISBN 978 0 8262 0809 5 Beyond This Silence State Street Press 1986 Works of trans medial electronic and digital literature Edit Liberty Ring 2020 With Ian Hatcher First published in Nokturno Hours of the Night 2016 With M D Coverley First exhibited at ELO2016 House of Trust 2014 With Ian Hatcher The Volta Evening Will Come Issue 44 August 2014 Vniverse iPad app 2015 With Ian Hatcher Duels Duets 2013 With Nick Montfort New Binary Press 2014 Sea and Spar Between 2010 With Nick Montfort Dear Navigator issue 1 3 Winter 2010 Also online how to read the work and an archived copy of its original introductory page slippingglimpse 2007 With Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo 7 and Paul Ryan 8 V Vniverse 2002 With Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo 7 The Iowa Review Web 2002 Errand Upon Which We Came 2001 With M D Coverley 9 Cauldron amp Net 3 2000 2001 The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot Word Circuits 1999 To Be Here as Stone Is 1999 With M D Coverley 10 Riding the Meridian volume 1 no 2 1999 True North hypertext Eastgate Systems 1997 ISBN 1 884511 36 8 Resources for study of Strickland s early works include Strickland recorded a reading from slippingglimpse during A Toast to the Flash Generation on December 31 2020 sponsored by the Electronic Literature Organization as Adobe Flash ceased working in web browsers 11 Patricia Tomaszek has recorded a screencast 12 of Errand Upon Which We Came that includes an interview with Strickland Dene Grigar and her team at Washington State University Vancouver host documentation related to True North including a traversal of the hypertext social media content photos the author s prologue to the traversal and an essay by Grigar 13 Essays Edit Essays by Strickland include Late to the Party in Chapter One On Becoming a Poet Marsh Hawk Press 2020 Joined at the Hip Simone Weil Quentin Meillassoux in Religion amp Literature 45 3 Autumn 2013 issue appeared in 2015 Spars of Language Lost at Sea with Nick Montfort Electronic Literature Organization conference paper Paris 2013 Formules 18 2014 cut to fit the tool spun course with Nick Montfort Digital Humanities Quarterly 7 1 2013 Poetry amp the Digital World English Language Notes 47 1 Special Issue Experimental Literary Education 2009 reprinted in Hidden Agendas Unreported Poetics Louis Armand editor Litteraria Pragensia Books Prague Czech Republic 2010 Born Digital Poetry Foundation 2009 Dovetailing Details Fly Apart All Over Again In Code In Poetry In Chreods 14 with Cynthia Lawson Jaramillo 2007 introduced by Joseph Tabbi with additional links in electronic book review 2007 Quantum Poetics Six Thoughts in Media Poetry An International Anthology Eduardo Kac editor Intellect Press Bristol UK 2007 Writing the Virtual Eleven Dimensions of E Poetry Leonardo Electronic Almanac special issue on New Media Poetry and Poetics Vol 14 No 5 6 2006 Possibilities of Being Poetry Speaking with Science Isotope 4 1 Spring Summer 2006 Poetry in the Electronic Environment electronic book review 2005 Moving Through Me as I Move A Paradigm for Interaction First Person New Media as Story Performance and Game Wardrip Fruin N and Harrigan P editors MIT Press 2004 Interviews Edit CUNY based Dichtung Yammer 15 has published an extended interview of Strickland by Ian Hatcher Exchange On Stephanie Strickland s How the Universe Is Made Poems New amp Selected 1985 2019 and Ringing the Changes 16 A recent interview in print is The CounterText Interview Stephanie Strickland conducted by Mario Aquilina and Ivan Callus It appears in CounterText Volume 2 Issue 2 pp 113 129 ISSN 2056 4406 Edinburgh University Press 2016 Audio interviews that primarily discuss the poems in Dragon Logic have been recorded by Kylan Rice 17 for likewise audio Tony Trigilio 18 for Radio Free Albion and Eric LeMay 19 for New Books in Literature Journals and anthologies Edit Strickland s poems have appeared in more than 90 journals including The Paris Review Grand Street New American Writing Ploughshares jubilat Chicago Review Boston Review Denver Quarterly Fence LIT Chain Harvard Review 1913 a journal of forms The Iowa Review Colorado Review Black Clock Vlak Western Humanities Review and Conditions 20 Strickland s print poems have appeared in anthologies such as Four Quartets Poetry in the Pandemic 2020 Poetics for the More than Human World 2020 Devouring the Green Fear of a Human Planet 2015 Best American Poetry 2013 Electronic Literature Collection 2 2011 The amp NOW Awards The Best Innovative Writing 2009 The Notre Dame Review The First Ten Years 2009 Strange attractors poems of love and mathematics Sarah Glaz editor A K Peters Ltd 2008 and A Sing Economy Flim Forum Anthology 2 2008 Online Strickland s poems have been published by The Poetry Foundation The Iowa Review Web MiPOesias Octopus Drunken Boat Poetry Daily Sous Rature Mad Hatters Review Saint Elizabeth Street Critiphoria La Fovea Hyperrhiz New Media Cultures Riding the Meridian Cauldron amp Net Web Del Sol Editor s Picks electronic book review Word Circuits Gallery Blue Moon The New River Furtherfield Poets for Living Waters Codex A Journal of Critical and Creative Writing for your Mobile Device and Big Other 20 After their first appearance Strickland s electronic works have been republished Sea and Spar Between was included in Rattapallax 21 Current State of Poetry Generators 2013 Bibliotheca Invisibilis Conceptualizations of the Invisible 2014 and in Polish TechSty 2014 n 1 9 2014 slippingglimpse was included in hyperrhiz new media cultures no 4 2008 Poets for Living Waters 2010 The Electronic Literature Collection Volume 2 2011 and Rattapallax 21 Current State of Poetry Generators 2013 V Vniverse was included in The Electronic Literature Collection Volume 2 2011 Strickland s work has been included in remixes For example Versus Vega Precessing by Jason Nelson Furtherfield 2005 incorporates elements of Strickland s work and the JavaScript code from Sea and Spar Between was used by Mark Sample to create House of Leaves of Grass Critical reception EditFor the 2022 Critical Code Studies Working Group Carly Schnitzler wrote Because the Ringing of the Changes is automated permutable and ongoing with Strickland and her team of programmers setting it into motion and simply letting it run it seems to act as a force for and representative of reality constant reminders that things our society s treatment of the environment of structural inequity and violence need to change regardless of if we any humans engaged with the work producers or consumers are paying attention to them or not Looking at and playing with the underlying code though seems to complicate this initial read of the role of human attention in and to the piece with divisions emerging as they do around form and content 21 In electronic book review Lai Tse Fan explained the impact of Ringing the Changes Strickland continues the tradition of poetic text generation engaging at the same with material constraints resulting from 17th century pattern ringing The practice consists of competing teams ringing church bells based on highly complex mathematical patterns Building on these the poet and her team created elaborate and complex algorithms that generate the poetry woven out of textual data harvested from writings of Sha Xin Wei Simone Weil Hito Steyerl and Yuk Hui among others Written with Python code the work demonstrates the powerful poetics of juxtaposition where the list of names of Black men and women subjected to state sanctioned violence strongly resonates throughout the whole text 22 In the same publication Sarah Whitcomb Laiola s review stated The textual data feeding this algorithm and surfacing as poetry according to mathematical patterns address a range of topics reflections on art and media histories of information and its categorization lessons in computational logic and quantum physics discussions of technologies and textiles and narratives of storytelling and as human movement The poetry that emerges then is a deftly woven text ile that brings together such disparate elements so that each might resonate beyond its own con textual limits 22 Reviewing Dragon Logic for The Common Terese Svoboda wrote No poet has plumbed or plummed with her thumb so deeply into the pies p s of physics math and myth and made them interlock on the atomic level She s brilliant slyly funny and profound 23 Other notable readings of the poems within Dragon Logic include Julie Marie Wade s review The Periscopic Poetics of Stephanie Strickland s Dragon Logic 24 for The Iowa Review and Orchid Tierney s review Code as such 25 for Jacket2 In a speech at the Library of Congress in 2013 Stuart Moulthrop called Sea and Spar Between possibly the greatest example of electronic literature yet attempted measured by volume at least but arguably also on a scale of importance 26 Michael Leong wrote of Sea And Spar Between The output is a rich combinatorial poem in its own right but it also offers the productively defamiliarizing experience of reading Melville and Dickinson at a distance giving us a slant perspective on two very familiar canonical authors We can say that Montfort and Strickland s poetics privileges neither the sea nor the spar but the between 3 Reviewing Zone Zero Djelloul Marbrook wrote For exploring the outer spaces of poetry Zone Zero is practically a handbook Placement is everything here recalling as it does the profound commitment of so many medieval Arab Berber and Jewish poets to mathematics and science There is no earthly reason to segregate these disciplines other than for the convenience of popularizers who write about them 27 Rachel Daley s review described how poetry as a practice is renewed as relevant applicable accessible and understandable when it opens readers own mechanisms for reading language to a slightly unprecedented but shared capability Stephanie Strickland s Zone Zero enacts and constitutes this shift 28 In an essay citing slippingglimpse an example of socially distributed cognition N Katherine Hayles has described how slippingglimpse is located within philosophical technical and aesthetic contexts that create a richer sense of information than the disembodied version that emerged from early cybernetics 29 In Nature s Agents Chreods Code Plato and Plants 30 Lisa Swanstrom describes the effect of slippingglimpse to make language look organic to make these pieces of verse in the tradition of the concrete poets and the image poets crawl out of the sequential nature of written language in order to try on a different form They remain words and phonemes beholden to English syntax yes but they also become part of a larger natural sign system one comprised of water currents and chreodic patterns algorithms and data flows In Iteration you see Floating Text and Chaotic Reading Viewing in slippingglimpse 31 Gwen Le Cor writes by shedding the solidity of stable written text and presenting a liquid text in motion slippingglimpse is also asking us to loosen our metaphors of writing and discard the solidity that weaving metaphors imply Text is no longer textile it is texture and in this particular case it is liquid texture In reviewing V Wave Son Nets Losing L Una Edward Falco described Strickland as urging readers to listen carefully with body as well as mind to see through the constructs the mind establishes to see into the world to see what may be beyond mind what the mind is not wired to see and most of all to resist the static and hierarchical while accepting the fluid and enmeshed In this sense Strickland like Dickinson before her is a deeply spiritual poet and one who incidentally is genuinely exploring the possibilities of digital writing to reshape the conventions of literature 32 Writing for The Iowa Review Web Jaishree Odin analyzed The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot as follows Thematically The Ballad is about unrequited love between Sand and Soot at another level it is about the art of navigation through multiple discourses that constitute human experience In some ways it also alludes to the computer generated electronic spaces and humans who interact with these spaces The sophisticated conception and design of this hypermedia work brings together a variety of discourses from art science mathematics philosophy and even mythology to create a weave of texts 33 In Contemporary Women s Writing Sally Evans wrote of The Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot Sand as a figure of cyberfemininity is frequently described in ways that trouble the clear boundaries between the organic and electronic selves Significantly Sand s hybridity also makes her excessive a self beyond the neat categorizations of human or machine She is a point of articulation between organic and inorganic matter and her contact with Harry Soot serves to entangle further human qualities such as frailty and emotion with the supposedly infallible electronic world 34 Joseph Tabbi has written on True North in Cognitive Fictions 35 and electronic book review Strickland s poetics of indirect citation annotation and recombination creates affinities with a distinctive and mostly American tradition that reaches back through Dickinson to Jonathan Edwards Her willingness to court abstraction and a minimalist language at the risk of occasional unreadability opens what should be a fruitful conversation with the Language poets while the recognition awarded True North by the judges for the Sandeen Prize ensures that her work will be welcomed into the domestic spaces of contemporary social realism no less than the more public minded collectivities represented at meetings of the Modern Language Association and the Society for Literature Science and the Arts where Strickland has given readings 36 Originally written in Catalan the detailed study Poesia Digital Deena Larsen y Stephanie Strickland by Oreto Domenech i Masia was published in a Spanish translation by the University of Valencia in 2015 37 Awards and grants EditLifetime Achievement Award Big Other 2020 Pushcart Prize Best of the Small Presses 2015 amp NOW Award The Best Innovative Writing 2014 and 2009 Best American Poetry 2013 Scribner 2013 Poetry Society of America s Alice Fay di Castagnola Award awarded to V WaveSon nets Losing L una Brenda Hillman judge 2000 First Prize Boston Review Poetry Contest for Ballad of Sand and Harry Soot Heather McHugh judge 1999 Salt Hill Hypertext Prize awarded to True North 1998 Ernest Sandeen Poetry Prize University of Notre Dame Press awarded to True North John Matthias judge 1997 Poetry Society of America s Alice Fay di Castagnola Award awarded to True North Barbara Guest judge 1996 Brittingham Prize University of Wisconsin Press awarded to The Red Virgin A Poem of Simone Weil Lisel Mueller judge 1993Strickland has received awards from National Endowment for the Arts Poetry and National Endowment for the Humanities Hypertext She has received fellowships from the MacDowell Colony Yaddo Djerassi and Ragdale References Edit Guide to the Stephanie Strickland Papers 1955 2016 David M Rubenstein Rare Book amp Manuscript Library Retrieved 1 September 2018 Stephanie Strickland ZONE ZERO Ahsahta Press Archived from the original on 2011 06 11 Retrieved 2011 01 24 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2011 06 17 Retrieved 2011 01 24 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link TechnoPoetry Archived from the original on 2013 10 04 Retrieved 2013 10 01 amp Now Program Schedule amp Now 2004 University of Notre Dame Archived from the original on 15 October 2012 Retrieved 29 June 2012 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2014 09 03 Retrieved 2014 08 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 2012 10 16 Retrieved 2012 12 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Earthscore by Paul Ryan Earthscore org Retrieved 1 September 2018 1 permanent dead link 2 permanent dead link A Toast to the Flash Generation ELMCIP 18 February 2014 Artist Screencast with Stephanie Strickland on Errand Upon Which We Came Vimeo com Retrieved 1 September 2018 For more on traversals see Traversals The Use of Preservation for Early Electronic Writing MIT Press 2017 ISBN 9780262035972 Welcome to nginx Archived from the original on 2014 08 31 Retrieved 2014 08 31 About Dichtung Yammer 27 June 2016 Exchange on Stephanie Strickland s How the Universe is Made Poems New amp Selected 1985 2019 and Ringing the Changes January 2021 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 06 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Radio Free Albion Episode 16 Stephanie Strickland Radiofreealbion com Retrieved 1 September 2018 Stephanie Strickland Dragon Logic Ahsahta Press 2013 Archived from the original on 2014 09 03 Retrieved 2014 09 01 a b Stephanie Strickland Stephaniestrickland com Retrieved 1 September 2018 Schnitzler Carly Ringing the Changes 2022 Code Critique Retrieved 20 February 2022 a b Laiola Sarah Whitcomb 31 October 2020 A Review of Stephanie Strickland s Ringing the Changes electronic book review Retrieved 4 February 2021 INSTALL WETWARE DRAGON LOGIC the Common Archived from the original on 2014 06 05 Retrieved 2014 06 05 The Periscopic Poetics of Stephanie Strickland s DRAGON LOGIC The Iowa Review Iowareview org Retrieved 1 September 2018 Code as such Jacket2 Jacket2 org Retrieved 1 September 2018 Moulthrop Stuart Failure to Contain Electronic Literature and the State Machine of Reading delivered April 5 2013 at the Library of Congress Washington D C Galatea Resurrects 20 A Poetry Engagement AHSAHTA BOOKS by SUSAN TICHY DAN BEACHY QUICK KATE GREENSTREET STEPHANIE STRICKLAND BRIAN TEARE ANDREW GRACE and ELIZABETH ROBINSON Galatearesurrection20 blogspot com 10 May 2013 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Jacket 37 Early 2009 Stephanie Strickland Zone Zero Ahsahta Press 2008 reviewed by Rachel Daley Jacketmagazine com Retrieved 1 September 2018 Hayles N Katherine Distributed Cognition at in Work Strickland Lawson Jaramillo and Ryan s slippingglimpse Frame vol 21 no 1 2009 pp 15 29 Nature s Agents Chreods Code Plato and Plants electronic book review Electronicbookreview com Retrieved 1 September 2018 Iteration you see Floating Text and Chaotic Reading Viewing in slippingglimpse electronic book review Electronicbookreview com Retrieved 1 September 2018 Review V Wave Son Nets Losing L Una by Stephanie Strickland Blackbird vcu edu Retrieved 1 September 2018 Image and Text in Hypermedia Literature 24 February 2006 Archived from the original on 24 February 2006 Retrieved 1 September 2018 Evans Sally The Patchwork Girl s Daughters Cyberfemininity Hybridity and Excess in the Poetry of Stephanie Strickland and Mez Breeze Contemporary Women s Writing January 2016 Oxford University Press Cognitive Fictions University of Minnesota Press Retrieved 1 September 2018 A Migration Between Media electronic book review Electronicbookreview com Retrieved 1 September 2018 Archived copy puv uv es Archived from the original on 27 May 2016 Retrieved 14 January 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link External links Edit Webliography Stephanie Strickland Sara Herbert Virginia Commonwealth University Poet s website An Interview with Stephanie Strickland Bookslut October 2008 Author Q amp A for Dragon Logic Usurped Ahsahta Press Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Stephanie Strickland amp oldid 1130628039, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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