Amy Hempel

Perplexing Nature of Diagram Poetry

by frankdevar

The diagram series is a collection of poems by Jim Rosenberg made within the constraints of an object made of computer generated symbols. Most likely, the poems are to be read on a linear path from top to bottom. The poem I will be focusing on is diagram 4.2. Diagram 4.2 consists of a set of verses, traveling down three paths, on either side of the objects and down the middle. Due to the placement of these verses, particularly with stanzas being parallel to one another, it is difficult to know what order to read the poem. One strategy I’ve used is to pick a side and read straight through. In this strategy, the middle row stanzas will be read for either poem. Sadly, using this strategy, there is no apparent set rhythm or unified message.

At this point the art work takes the role of rhythm or at the very least direction. Based on Rosenberg’s object design, the shapes, and path of shapes, cause the viewer to want to read the poem in a traditional linear fashion. The code or pattern in this work is both transparent and opaque. We can understand how Rosenberg wants us to read the poem through the combining of an artful structure and text, but ultimately the poem is incomprehensible. Aesthetically, the work is confusing. More questions than answers are revealed.

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This text, Code, Culture, and the Postmodern, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States license, although certain works referenced herein may be separately licensed.