Tan Lin

Last updated
Tan A. Lin
Born1957 (age 6667)
NationalityAmerican
Education Carleton College
Columbia University
Known for Poetry, filmmaking
Notable workHEATH (Plagiarism/Outsource), 7 Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004: The Joy of Cooking
Style"Ambient" literature
Children1 (Ahn)

Tan Anthony Lin is an American poet, author, filmmaker, and professor. He defines his work as "ambient" literature, which draws on and samples source material from the Internet and popular culture to address issues involving plagiarism, copyright, boredom, distracted modes of reading, paratext, and technology. [1]

Contents

Early life and education

Lin was born April 24, 1957, in Seattle, Washington, to Chinese-American immigrants born in Shanghai, China, and Beijing, China. His parents migrated to the United States from China, his father in 1948 and his mother in 1949. [2] [3] His father, Henry Huan Lin, was a ceramist and former dean of the Ohio University College of Fine Arts. His mother, Julia Chang Lin, born in Shanghai, was a poet and taught literature at Ohio University. [4] Tan Lin is the nephew of Lin Huiyin, who is said to be the first female architect in China. [5] Lin Juemin and Lin Yin Ming, both among the 72 martyrs of the Second Guangzhou Uprising, were cousins of his grandfather. [6] Lin Chang-min, a Hanlin of Qing dynasty, the emperor's teacher, was the father of Lin Hui-yin and grandfather of Tan.

The Lin family moved to Athens, Ohio, where in 1959, Tan's sister, Maya Ying Lin, was born. [7] She is an American designer and artist who designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. [8]

Lin received a Bachelor of Arts in English from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota. He received M.A., M.Phil., and Ph.D. degrees in English Literature from Columbia University in New York City; his dissertation, completed in 1995, was titled "Garbage, Truth, and the Recycling of Modern Life." [9] In addition to writing essays, poems, and books, Lin currently teaches creative writing at Columbia University and New Jersey City University. He has previously taught at the University of Virginia, the California Institute of the Arts, and Brooklyn College. [10] [11]

Works

Lin's style as an artist comes from the principle of "ambient" literature. A commentary by Katherine Elaine Sanders described the style by saying, "Lin leads his audiences in exploring the temporary ephemera that fills our daily interactions: emails, Twitter feeds, Facebook messages, blogs, movies, magazines, and advertisements, indexes, photographs, and recipes." [12]

The first published work by Lin was Lotion Bullwhip Giraffe in 1996, a "meditation backwards," where he invented new poetry structures through the manipulation of the mechanics of language. [13] In 2003, Lin published his second work, Blipsoak01, where he again used inventive poetry structures, this time through the abstract visual placement of words.

From January 10, 2006 to October 16, 2006, Lin maintained a blog, titled AMBIENT FICTION READING SYSTEM 01, of everything he read, the time it took him to read it, and the place where he read it. In the project's preface, Lin described it as "a stopwatch of various off-hand, inefficient, and fragmentary reading practices, really the dated, after-effects of reading." [14] A first expanded edition of the project was published online by UbuWeb as BIB. (2007), and a second edition was published in 2011 as Bib., Rev. Ed. [15]

In ambience is a novel with a logo, Lin used a subtitle system consisting of citations in the format of Google search entries. [16] Less than a year later, he published HEATH , which utilized the same subtitle system presented in ambience, but also focused on language and graphics from various online sources. In 2010, Lin published 7 Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004: The Joy of Cooking, in which he continued his use of inventive poetry structures, this time in the style of "a field guide to the arts." [17] In 2011, he published Insomnia and the Aunt, in which he mourned the death of his aunt, who owned a motel. Lin's most recent published work, "The Fern Rose Bibliography" (2022), is an excerpt from his forthcoming novel, Our Feelings Were Made by Hand. [18]

HEATH

In the project HEATH (Plagiarism/Outsource), Lin presented a collection of language and graphics compiled from a variety of online sources, ranging from advertisements to Facebook to scholarly articles. For Lin, the work touched on "who is more generally responsible for certain texts," rather than "who physically authors a text." [19] He explored the idea of an ambient novel by highlighting how a book works and how a reader reacts to a printed object when the content itself is arguably meaningless. The content skips from subject to subject in a seemingly random way through plagiarisms, outsourced material, and meta-content. [20]

7 Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004: The Joy of Cooking

In 7 Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004: The Joy of Cooking, Lin wrote prose poems that are disrupted by themselves, alluding to the idea of art being "relaxingly meaningless." He distorted the line between various aesthetic disciplines and took avant-garde notions to a new level by diffusing them into ambient formats such as yoga and meditation. The seven sections of the book each address a different art form, including photography, painting, the novel, architecture, music, theory, and film, using both text and photographs.

The critical response to 7 Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004: The Joy of Cooking was generally positive. The poet Kenneth Goldsmith wrote, "Lin proposes a radical idea for reading: not reading. Words, so prevalent today, are merely elements that constitute fleeting engagements."

The work was the winner of a Book Award for poetry in 2012 from the Association for Asian American Studies. [17]

Bibliography

Essays and shorter works

Published works

Art exhibitions

Public art projects

Film, theatre, and video works

Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maya Lin</span> American designer and artist (born 1959)

Maya Ying Lin is an American architect, designer and sculptor. Born in Athens, Ohio to Chinese immigrants, she attended Yale University to study architecture. In 1981, while still an undergraduate at Yale she achieved national recognition when she won a national design competition for the planned Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. The memorial was designed in the minimalist architectural style, and it attracted controversy upon its release but went on to become influential. Lin has since designed numerous memorials, public and private buildings, landscapes, and sculptures. In 1989, she designed the Civil Rights Memorial in Montgomery, Alabama. She has an older brother, the poet Tan Lin.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amy Tan</span> American novelist (born 1952)

Amy Ruth Tan is an American author best known for her novel The Joy Luck Club (1989), which was adapted into a 1993 film. She is also known for other novels, short story collections, children's books, and a memoir.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Ashbery</span> American poet (1927–2017)

John Lawrence Ashbery was an American poet and art critic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lin Yutang</span> Chinese writer (1895–1976)

Lin Yutang was a Chinese inventor, linguist, novelist, philosopher, and translator. He had an informal style in both Chinese and English, and he made compilations and translations of the Chinese classics into English. Some of his writings criticized the racism and imperialism of the West.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jack Spicer</span> American poet

Jack Spicer was an American poet often identified with the San Francisco Renaissance. In 2009, My Vocabulary Did This to Me: The Collected Poetry of Jack Spicer won the American Book Award for poetry. He spent most of his writing life in San Francisco.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Antin</span> American poet, critic and performance artist

David Abram Antin was an American poet, art critic, performance artist, and university professor.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tan Swie Hian</span> Singaporean multidisciplinary artist (born 1943)

Tan Swie Hian is a Singaporean multidisciplinary artist known for his contemporary Chinese calligraphy, Chinese poetry and contemporary art sculptures found in Singapore and many parts of the world.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Taiwanese Mandarin</span> Forms of Mandarin Chinese spoken in Taiwan

Taiwanese Mandarin, frequently referred to as Guoyu or Huayu, is the variety of Mandarin Chinese spoken in Taiwan. A large majority of the Taiwanese population is fluent in Mandarin, though many also speak a variety of Min Chinese known as Taiwanese Hokkien, which has had a significant influence on the Mandarin spoken on the island.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kenneth Goldsmith</span> American poet and critic (born 1961)

Kenneth Goldsmith is an American poet and critic. He was the founding editor of UbuWeb and an artist-in-residence at the Center for Programs in Contemporary Writing (CPCW) at the University of Pennsylvania, where he taught. He was also a senior editor of PennSound at the University of Pennsylvania. He hosted a weekly radio show at WFMU from 1995 until June 2010. He published 32 books including ten books of poetry, notably Fidget (2000), Soliloquy (2001), Day (2003) and his American trilogy, The Weather (2005), Traffic (2007), and Sports (2008), 'Seven American Deaths and Disasters (2011), and 'Capital: New York Capital of the Twentieth Century (2015). He also was the author of three books of essays, Uncreative Writing: Managing Language in the Digital Age (2011), Wasting Time on The Internet (2016), and Duchamp Is My Lawyer: The Polemics, Pragmatics, and Poetics of UbuWeb (2020). In 2013, he was appointed the Museum of Modern Art's first poet laureate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mei-mei Berssenbrugge</span> American poet

Mei-mei Berssenbrugge is a contemporary poet. Winner of two American Book Awards, her work is often associated with the Language School, the poetry of the New York School, phenomenology, and visual art. She is married to the painter Richard Tuttle, with whom she has frequently collaborated.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Yau</span> American poet and critic

John Yau is an American poet and critic who lives in New York City. He received his B.A. from Bard College in 1972 and his M.F.A. from Brooklyn College in 1978. He has published over 50 books of poetry, artists' books, fiction, and art criticism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joy Harjo</span> American Poet Laureate

Joy Harjo is an American poet, musician, playwright, and author. She served as the 23rd United States Poet Laureate, the first Native American to hold that honor. She was also only the second Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry to have served three terms. Harjo is a citizen of the Muscogee Nation and belongs to Oce Vpofv. She is an important figure in the second wave of the literary Native American Renaissance of the late 20th century. She studied at the Institute of American Indian Arts, completed her undergraduate degree at University of New Mexico in 1976, and earned an MFA degree at the University of Iowa in its creative writing program.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Liu Bannong</span> Chinese poet and linguist

Liu Bannong or Liu Fu was a Chinese poet and linguist. He was a leader in the May Fourth Movement. He made great contributions to modern Chinese literature, phonology and photography.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wang Hui (intellectual)</span> Chinese intellectual

Wang Hui is a professor in the Department of Chinese Language and Literature, Tsinghua University, Beijing. His researches focus on contemporary Chinese literature and intellectual history. He was the executive editor of the influential magazine Dushu from May 1996 to July 2007. The US magazine Foreign Policy named him as one of the top 100 public intellectuals in the world in May 2008. Wang Hui has been Visiting Professor at Harvard, Edinburgh, Bologna (Italy), Stanford, UCLA, Berkeley, and the University of Washington, among others. In March 2010, he appeared as the keynote speaker at the annual meeting for the Association for Asian Studies.

Chinese American literature is the body of literature produced in the United States by writers of Chinese descent. The genre began in the 19th century and flowered in the 20th with such authors as Sui Sin Far, Frank Chin, Maxine Hong Kingston, and Amy Tan.

Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">HEATH</span>

HEATH (plagiarism/outsource) by Tan Lin is book "set" in plain text, composed of a mash up of data sources from RSS feeds, blog posts, Google searches, retrieved photographs, handwritten notes, and items of that nature. It is divided into multiple parts, the most famous of which being plagiarism/outsource. Lin devotes part of the book to a series of web searches regarding the death of actor Heath Ledger in 2008 in Untilted Health Ledger Project, which is assumed to be the reason for the name of the whole book.

Craig Dworkin is an American poet, critic, editor, and Professor of English at the University of Utah. He is founding senior editor of Eclipse, an online archive of 20th-century small-press writing and 21st-century born-digital publications.

John Howland Cayley is a Canadian pioneer of writing in digital media as well as a theorist of the practice, a poet, and a Professor of Literary Arts at Brown University.

Malachi Edwin Vethamani is a Malaysian-born Indian poet, writer, editor, bibliographer, academic and critic.

References

  1. "Tan Lin". Foundation for Contemporary Arts. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  2. Paul Berger (November 5, 2006). "Ancient Echoes in a Modern Space". The New York Times. Retrieved January 2, 2009.
  3. Finding Your Roots , February 2, 2016, PBS
  4. Rothstein, Edward. "Maya Lin". The New York Times. Retrieved January 2, 2009.
  5. Peter G. Rowe & Seng Kuan (2004). Architectural Encounters with Essence and Form in Modern China. MIT Press. ISBN   978-0-262-68151-3.
  6. Donald Langmead (2011). Maya Lin: A Biography. ABC-CLIO. p. 5. ISBN   978-0-313-37854-6.
  7. Berger, Paul (2006-11-05). "Ancient Echoes in a Modern Space". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  8. Rothstein, Edward. "Maya Lin". The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-10-04.
  9. Lin, Tan. "Tan Anthony Lin CV" (PDF). Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  10. "Tan Lin : The Poetry Foundation". www.poetryfoundation.org. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  11. 1 2 Lin, Tan. "Tan Anthony Lin CV" (PDF). Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  12. "BOMB Magazine — Tan Lin by Katherine Elaine Sanders". bombmagazine.org. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  13. "Poet's Sampler: Tan Lin | Boston Review". bostonreview.net. Retrieved 2015-10-07.
  14. Lin, Tan. "January 10, 2006". AMBIENT FICTION READING SYSTEM 01. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  15. "Bib., Rev. Ed". Motto Books. Retrieved 20 July 2023.
  16. "(2007) Tan Lin | HEATH, prelude to tracing the actor as network | Danny Snelson (2010-2014)". aphasic-letters.com. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  17. 1 2 "UPNEBookPartners - Seven Controlled Vocabularies and Obituary 2004. The Joy of Cooking: Tan Lin". www.upne.com. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  18. "About". Cookie Jar: Home is a Foreign Place. Retrieved 21 July 2023.
  19. Fink, Thomas. "Tan Lin, plagiarism/outsource". otoliths. Retrieved 2015-10-04.
  20. "HEATH COURSE PAK by Tan Lin | HTMLGIANT". htmlgiant.com. Retrieved 2015-10-12.
  21. "Electronic Poetry Center". epc.buffalo.edu. Retrieved 2015-10-05.
  22. "Award Year 2022".

Further reading