The words sampled in Ringing the Changes allude to changes that need to be rung—that is, considered and heard—in our lives and communities. By permuting and re-aligning these texts, a generated order makes plain how concerns can be variously mapped and, thus, variously understood; by enacting the differences ordering and context make, it helps us to refuse a “canonical” order, or hierarchy, of attention, such as is normally enforced by print presentation, thereafter to be lionized and remediated as “true” or “fake.”
Stephanie Strickland’s eight books of poetry include Dragon Logic, The Red Virgin, and True North. She has also published eleven digital poems. Her multi-platform V consists of six works, the latest being Vniverse, an iPad app co-created with Ian Hatcher and keyed to the two-in-one print book, V : WaveTercets / Losing L’una, from SpringGun Press. A book and accompanying CD, Zone : Zero, includes both print and digital versions of slippingglimpse, an eco-poem that maps text to Atlantic wave patterns. Recent work includes House of Trust, with Ian Hatcher, a generative poem in praise of free public libraries, and Hours of the Night, an MP4 PowerPoint poem probing age, sleep, and the night, with M.D. Coverley.
Strickland is a long-time director of the Electronic Literature Organization and co-editor of the first Electronic Literature Collection. She has also published a number of critical papers and interviews. As the McEver Chair in Writing at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Strickland created and produced a TechnoPoetry Festival. Installations included holographic poems and Encryption Stones from the Genesis Series by Eduardo Kac; John Cayley’s what we will, riverIsland , and speaking clocks; Diana Reed Slattery’s Glide game; Sha Xin Wei’s Hubbub; Camille Utterback and Romy Achituv’s Text Rain; and Diane Gromala’s Biomorphic Typography.Pauline Oliveros and Yacov Sharir led a dance performance, Eugene Thacker a critical panel, and many web works were presented by student docents: a true cornucopia of the digital!
Strickland’s work across print and multiple media is being collected by the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book And Manuscript Library at Duke University. Just out is her collection, How the Universe Is Made: Poems New & Selected, from Ahsahta Press. For more on her work, http://