Intertext

 

By J. Savage, Contributor

 

Place: A wilderness to which history has happened[1]

Graveyards: A good concept with poor spatial execution.[2]

Chinatown, New Westminster: Burnt down, now a dog park.[3]

Font: Hard for four people to agree upon.[4]

Woman: A born criminal, more terrible than any man.[5]

Stars: Beautiful, even if you remember nothing about them.[6]

Trains: Liz really liked this poem.[7]

Extinction: Ultimately, the fate of all species.[8]

[1] McKay, Don. ā€œOtherwise than Place.ā€ Deactivated West 100. 2005, Gaspereau Press, p. 14-31. Thereā€™s an arrogance here, I think.

[2] We went to the Fraser Cemetery and I remember a lot of things: Burials pointed east, monkey puzzle trees to hide from the devil, and for a while, I wanted to be a cemetery keeper. Itā€™s always stuck with me that weā€™re running out of spaces to bury people. Sometimes you have to roll that thought around for a minute: We are running out of places to bury people.

[3]I live here now. I think about that lecture every time I walk past that park. I think about what it meansā€”a dog park? Because originally, this wasnā€™t even when Chinatown was. It was on the other side of the bridge. They built it twice. Now itā€™s just a dog park.

[4] Lived experience in a World History and Current Issues collaborative presentations-based course. Ā I think about my teammates often. How are they? They feel like connections spread thin as a desperate net. I hope theyā€™re well. Also: Times New Roman, 12-point font, double spaced. It isnā€™t that hard. Something has to be universal, after all.

[5] Lombroso, Cesare. The Female Offender. 1895, New York: D Appleton. Something else learned: No one else thinks Lombrosoā€™s misogyny is hilarious. 21st century humour: Laughing at dead misogynists because youā€™re scared of the living ones.

[6] I have none of my old assignments for my astronomy course and couldnā€™t tell you the professorā€™s name.

[7] I forgot to email her back about a poem submission and now I can never speak to her ever again.

[8] A PowerPoint slide in GEOB 102, and better than any poem Iā€™ll ever write.

 

 

 

[1] McKay, Don. ā€œOtherwise than Place.ā€ Deactivated West 100. 2005, Gaspereau Press, p. 14-31. Thereā€™s an arrogance here, I think.

[2] We went to the Fraser Cemetery and I remember a lot of things: Burials pointed east, monkey puzzle trees to hide from the devil, and for a while, I wanted to be a cemetery keeper. Itā€™s always stuck with me that weā€™re running out of spaces to bury people. Sometimes you have to roll that thought around for a minute: We are running out of places to bury people.

[3]I live here now. I think about that lecture every time I walk past that park. I think about what it meansā€”a dog park? Because originally, this wasnā€™t even when Chinatown was. It was on the other side of the bridge. They built it twice. Now itā€™s just a dog park.

[4] Lived experience in a World History and Current Issues collaborative presentations-based course. Ā I think about my teammates often. How are they? They feel like connections spread thin as a desperate net. I hope theyā€™re well. Also: Times New Roman, 12-point font, double spaced. It isnā€™t that hard. Something has to be universal, after all.

[5] Lombroso, Cesare. The Female Offender. 1895, New York: D Appleton. Something else learned: No one else thinks Lombrosoā€™s misogyny is hilarious. 21st century humour: Laughing at dead misogynists because youā€™re scared of the living ones.

[6] I have none of my old assignments for my astronomy course and couldnā€™t tell you the professorā€™s name.

[7] I forgot to email her back about a poem submission and now I can never speak to her ever again.

[8] A PowerPoint slide in GEOB 102, and better than any poem Iā€™ll ever write.