Amaranth Borsuk

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Amaranth Borsuk
Born1981 (age 42–43)
NationalityAmerican
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of California Los Angeles (BA, 2003)
University of Southern California (MA, 2006; PhD, 2010)
Thesis"‘Machines Made of Words: Poets, Technology, and the Mediation of Subjectivity" (2010)
Doctoral advisorSusan McCabe
Websitehttp://www.amaranthborsuk.com (personal)
https://www.uwb.edu/ias/faculty-and-staff/amaranth-borsuk (university)

Amaranth Borsuk (born 1981) is an American poet and educator known for her experiments with textual materiality and digital poetry.[1] She is currently an associate professor at the University of Washington Bothell's School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, where she teaches undergraduate courses on poetry, philology, and experimental writing. She also serves as the Chair of the school's M.F.A. program in Creative Writing, which she co-chaired from 2018 to 2022.[2]

Life[edit]

Borsuk was born in Meriden, Connecticut. She is fluent in English, French and Hebrew.

Borsuk holds a B.A. in English from the University of California Los Angeles, and an M.A. in English Literature and Ph.D. in Literature and Creative Writing from the University of Southern California.

Borsuk was a Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow in the Humanities at MIT. She has been married to software developer Brad Bouse since 2013, and the couple have one daughter.[3]

Works[edit]

Her work includes poetry (Handiwork, Tonal Saw, Pomegranate Eater), artist books, and collaborative digital projects (Abra, As We Know, Whispering Galleries, Between Page and Screen), and she has a special interest in investigating textual materiality.

Her 2013 collaboration with Jesper Juul and Nick Monfort, The Deletionist, erases texts on a web screen to leave words that then form another poem by themselves, thus further exploring the tropes of overwriting and erasure.[4]

Publications[edit]

Between Page and Screen (Siglio, 2012) by Borsuk and Brad Bouse is a 2012 project that incorporated both a paper book and digital art. The paper book did not contain words but had a series of geometric patterns. Readers used a webcam to have the text appear above the book. [5] Between Page and Screen was reviewed by Books on Books.[6] Laura Shackleford explains that this work renders "tangible the transactional spaces between print and language practices."[7]

Whispering Galleries (2014) by Borsuk and Brad Bouse is a 2014 site-specific, interactive, multimedia poetry project that uses a reader's gestures to transform a local diary into erasure poetry on the screen. As readers gesture over the computer, transcriptions from a diary dissolve as so much digital dust, leaving behind a poem. Through a webcam, the participant's shadow emerges behind the words, creating a symbolic link between the viewer and the work.

Whispering Galleries was commissioned by Site Projects, a nonprofit that supports artistic works. The project was also supported by The New Haven Free Public Library and the Arts Council of Greater New Haven. Originally displayed at the New Haven Free Public Library on April 26, 2014, it later went on to be exhibited at The Institute Library in New Haven (2014), The International Symposium on Electronic Art at Simon Fraser University, Vancouver (2015), and “You | I: Interfaces & Reader Experience” at the Paul Watkins Gallery, Winona State University (2016). It is available online. For the full experience, a Chrome browser, a Leap controller, and a webcam are required.

ABRA (2016) by Borsuk, Kate Durbin, and Ian Hatcher was created under a National Endowments for the Arts funded Expanded Artists’ Books Grant from the Center for Book and Paper Arts at Columbia College Chicago. It was reviewed in Weird Sisters.[8]

The Book explains the history of the book as media and explores relationships between authors, readers, and publishers.[9][10]

Prizes[edit]

  • Gulf Coast Poetry Prize, 2011
  • Slope Editions Prize, 2011
  • Subito Prize, 2014

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Jones, Steven E. (2013-08-15). The Emergence of the Digital Humanities (1 ed.). Routledge. p. 181. ISBN 9780415635523. OCLC 923479579.
  2. ^ "Amaranth Borsuk's faculty profile, School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences, UW Bothell". 2020.
  3. ^ Susi, Danielle (2020-08-19). "Dinnerview: Amaranth Borsuk". Entropy Magazine.
  4. ^ Portela, Manuel (2018). "Chapter 10: Writing Under Constraint of the Regime of Computation". In Tabbi, Joseph (ed.). The Bloomsbury Handbook of Electronic Literature. London, UK: Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 197–198. ISBN 978-1-4742-3025-4.
  5. ^ Borsuk, Amaranth; Bouse, Brad (2016-05-02). Between Page and Screen. SpringGun Press. ISBN 9780986176425. OCLC 953264151.
  6. ^ "Books On Books Collection – Amaranth Borsuk: Between Page and Screen (2012)". Books on Books. February 19, 2017. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  7. ^ Shackleford, Laura (2018). "Chapter 19: Postmodern, Posthuman, Post-Digital". In Tabbi, Joseph (ed.). The Bloomsbury handbook of electronic literature. London, UK: Bloomsbury academic, an imprint of Bloomsbury publishing Plc. p. 336. ISBN 978-1-4742-3025-4.
  8. ^ Santos, Dorothy (November 1, 2016). "Playing with the Written Word: A Review of ABRA: A Living Text". Weird Sisters. Retrieved February 19, 2023.
  9. ^ "#ELRBOOKS: Book reviews by Kathi Inman Berens". electronicliteraturereview. 2018-12-21. Retrieved 2024-03-25.
  10. ^ Borsuk, Amaranth (2018). The Book. doi:10.7551/mitpress/10631.001.0001. ISBN 9780262346887.

External links[edit]