burning as though
accusation is evidence
innocent until proven
filthy
by supremacy’s medieval
darkening
cruise sadistic
missiles
in airspace
internationalized
on prime time tv
set clocks to progress
as capital backpeddles
tainted goods
low dose over the
counter
intelligence on high
alert
reason sold as empty
addiction
to barren media
barrelling dollars per
down the barrel of a
pun
Akin
to the ongoing email call-and-response collaborations of Douglas Barbour and
Sheila M. Murphy – produced so far as Continuations
(Edmonton AB: University of Alberta Press, 2006) and Continuations 2 (University of Alberta Press, 2012) – is Sybil Unrest (Vancouver BC: New Star
Books, 2013) by Vancouver writers Larissa Lai and Rita Wong. If this title sounds familiar, it should: the book was originally published by LineBooks in 2008. As the back cover suggests,
the collection was “Inspired by renga and composed via an email conversation,”
and explores “fresh connections between feminism, environmentalism, and
personal-political responsibility […].”Moving through western Canada and
contemporary culture, the poem writes on social upheavals, the nature of the
citizen, violence and the dangers of capitalism. Utilizing play and pun,
politics and social awareness, the poem-fragments display a rushing, accumulated
urgency that demands the performance, riffing off contemporary pop and other references
like a jazz lingo:
hack hawk
haul ass
where past
wear pants
the posture of packing
cracked patriarchy
shuffled deck dick duck
yes duck the shit
and no i’m not
happy to see you
when my civic
dissonance
proclaims an
upstanding citizen
The
book is broken up into three suites of short fragments, nearly operatic in
scale, the poems are an intriguing blend of the individual works by the two
authors. Larissa Lai, known predominantly as a novelist, authored the poetry
collection Automaton Biographies (Arsenal
Pulp Press, 2009), and Rita Wong is the author of the poetry collections monkeypuzzle (Press Gang, 1998) and forage (Nightwood Editions, 2007), each
of which utilize variations on what they collaborate on for their Sybil Unrest—short lyric fragments, social
awareness and a cadence that twists and turns and pops. In the
acknowledgements, they write a short piece on the origins of the book (I would
recommend highly going through their write-up in its entirety, but will only
reproduce a section of such, here), that begins:
This poem began in a
renga spirit during the 2003 Hong Kong International Literary Festival. It was
a fraught moment – the beginning of the SARS crisis in Hong Kong and the
American invasion of Iraq which we witnessed through the highly interested
sources of CNN and BBC in our hotel room TV. Attending David Fujino and AaronVidaver's playful “july 23/03” at the Kootenay School of Writing later that year
was the catalytic inspiration that actually got this poem off the ground. sybil unrest is a back and forth
conversation conducted by email over the course of several months.
At our first public
reading of the poem at the Kootenay School of Writing, on December 13, 2003,
Fred Wah asked “Where did the ‘I’ go?” “We” gesture towards how the personal
sparks this dialogue. “Ours” is not so much an individualized “I”, but rather a
range of “i”s emerging and fading back as instances that unsettle the
(capitalist) time and space we occupy. As such, the “i”s are not reliable but
trace movement through the long now and constitute evidence of some hopeful
reaching towards friendly coexistence of multiple tactics/perspectives.
I’ve
always been curious about the sheer amount of western Canadian poets who can
manage a language poetry with a social edge (Stephen Collis, Jeff Derksen,
nikki reimer, Maxine Gadd, Louis Cabri, et al), and there is an incredible
crackle and pop lyric to the language here, a musicality that sings and rides
and riffs, rushing along like an onslaught of water. The poem urges, demands
and even calls for action, but provides few answers, perhaps where no easy
answers could exist.
beast within is best
in enemy arms
or canary’s coal mine
tarred and feathered
by the same boss
girl our goodness
while ewes bleat
refusal
we jack the cracker
fm radios the past
post-punked in new
romantic
bombs our harlequin
fingers nimble threads
camels eye the needle
as we eye heaven
on the other side of
complicity
capital beckons sweet
as freedom in a tight
skirt
violence loves desire
as meat loves leer
mammon’s mama-san moves
mountains
holy shock thin veil
for fascination
agape quells what wells
cri de cur of nervous
organism
hankering after rich
man’s bone
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