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robert frost's digital disciple Post date  02.05.2008, 9:58 AM

posted by ben vershbow

Via Ron Silliman, an interesting profile of Edmund Skellings, poet laureate of Florida since 1980 and newly appointed professor of humanities at Florida Tech. A New Englander, Skellings started off as a poet in the Robert Frost mould, and even studied under Frost at the University of Iowa in the late 50s. Around that time, however, he started experimenting with sound recordings on magnetic tape and later published a book of poems, Duels and Duets, whose covers were two vinyl recordings of Skellings voice. In 1978, Skellings discovered computers and thence embarked on a long career as an electro-poetic experimenter, combining audio recordings with digital animations of imagery and text, all the while retaining a poetic style as accessible and unadorned as Frost's (or so the Florida Today article asserts). You can view some of digital creations on his web site. Skellings isn't necessarily the electronic poet (or animator) for me, but his life is an interesting case study of literary and technological flux.

Posted by ben vershbow on February 5, 2008 9:58 AM
tags: animation, poetry, writing

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