Showing posts with label Kyle Flemmer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kyle Flemmer. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 3, 2024

Kyle Flemmer : On Alternate histories

 

 

 

 

 

As a junior high student of the millennial generation, I regularly took trips to the computer lab to work on school presentations, conduct research for essays, or use educational software to supplement the ordinary, paper-based coursework. Because I was part of the first wave of public school students to be given access to classroom-sized computer labs, my cohort was unintentionally granted a shocking amount of freedom. Supervising a classroom of pre-teens hidden behind rows of monitors must have been borderline impossible, especially because teachers in 2001 weren’t exactly expected to be tech savvy, and they certainly didn’t have a mature IT industry behind them to moderate student activity on school computers.

At first, I don’t think our educators anticipated or accounted for the hundredfold efficiencies afforded by computers to people intimately familiar with them, particularly those of us proficient in searching for information online. For example, in the seventh grade, I was part of a small group of students granted access to the computer lab during math class. The lab was right across the hall from the classroom, and our doors were always open, so ostensibly we were part of that class, just receiving instruction and completing practice problems on the computer rather than on paper. But I was raised on video games and am halfway decent at math, so I was able to complete the Grade 7 and 8 Mathematics programs, including their final exams, in a matter of weeks, and so I spent the remaining months of the school year playing Flash games on eBaum’s World.

Later, once our teachers realized they couldn’t sit at the front of the computer lab and expect to observe our behavior like they could in a traditional classroom, they would roam up and down the rows of terminals, checking our progress on the assignment over our shoulders. Some computer labs were even arranged in a big circle, with all the computers facing in from the outer wall like some sort of Apple-sponsored panopticon. And yet, kids are more clever than they are conscientious, especially when they have a generational edge on their authority figures, and we students quickly adopted pass-times that looked like research or whatever else seemed to be expected of us while we goofed around on the computer.

One such pastime was the Wiki Game or Wikirace, as it was referred to in my friend group. According to Wikipedia, the Wiki Game “is a race between any number of participants, using [hyperlinks] to travel from one Wikipedia page to another. The first person to reach the destination page, or the person that reaches the destination using the fewest links, wins the race.” I’m not claiming to have been anywhere near the epicenter of the invention of the Wiki Game, but we did play the hell out of it in my formative years, and those experiences laid the foundation for my above/ground chapbook, Alternate histories.

I wrote Alternate histories by starting on the Wikipedia page of an ancient technology, then finding various routes to the page of an emerging technology. For example, “Petroglyph >> Emoji” charts six different paths from the “Petroglyph” page to the “Emoji” one. By mapping routes of different length from term A to term B, the series plays with the human propensity for linking ideas together, the associative leaps we make that spur creativity and innovation, and which bring us from “Microlith” to “Total war” in a mere two clicks.

Success in the Wiki Game is predicated on the ability to form meaningful associations between terms that move you closer to the target article. As a teenager, winning was both an intellectual flex on my friends and a collective act of rebellion, given that we usually played under the noses of our teachers; we had to be smart enough to win and not get caught while doing it. Competition and subterfuge aside, wikiracing undoubtedly made me a better poet, not because I now pursue especially valuable links between subjects, but because it enamoured me to the larger language game we all play—meaning by association—where the winning sequence of ideas is not always the most direct.

 

 

 

 

Kyle Flemmer is a writer, publisher, and digital media artist from Calgary in Treaty 7 territory. He founded The Blasted Tree Publishing Co. in 2014 and his first book, Barcode Poetry, was published in 2021. Kyle's first trade book of poetry, Supergiants, is forthcoming from Wolsak & Wynn in 2025. His most recent chapbooks include WikiPoems from 845 Press, Gourmand from Paper View Books and Alternate histories from above/ground press.

Monday, May 1, 2023

Kyle Flemmer : 5W-20 (for Nikki Reimer

from Report from the Reimer Society

 

 

 




Kyle Flemmer is an author, editor, and publisher from Calgary in Treaty 7 territory. Kyle founded The Blasted Tree Publishing Company in 2014 and served as Managing Editor of filling Station magazine from 2018-2020. He has published several chapbooks of visual poetry, most recently Little Songs by No Press and The Heavy Crown by nOIR:Z. Kyle's first book, Barcode Poetry, was published by The Blasted Tree in 2021.

Monday, May 2, 2022

Kyle Flemmer : Fun, Fewer Fucks (for Kate Siklosi)

 from Report from the Siklosi Society, Vol. 1, No. 2

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

Kyle Flemmer is an author, editor, and publisher from Calgary in Treaty 7 territory. He studies digital poetics at the University of Calgary where he is a teaching and research assistant. Kyle founded the Blasted Tree Publishing Co. in 2014 and is a former managing editor of filling Station magazine. His first book, Barcode Poetry, was published by The Blasted Tree in 2021.

Friday, February 4, 2022

Kyle Flemmer : Two WikiPoems

 

 

 

 

Sunshine Sketches of a Little Town

 

an unreliable narrator, whose descriptions of the town
          twist ending
forces readers to reconsider their point
Anagnorisis
, or discovery, is the protagonist's sudden
Poetics
, as part of his discussion of
         drama (to include comedy, tragedy, and the

Satire
and political satire use ironic comedy
          its greater purpose is often constructive social criticism,

          either for consensual reform or powerful revolution.

social sciences, including sociology and political science.

a body of knowledge about social order and
Thomas Hobbes
is recognized as the first to
          expounds an influential formulation of social contract theory.
 

posit that individuals have consented, either explicitly
          theory of consent is historically contrasted to
          include implied consent, express consent, informed consent and

          choice, or similar manner of determining blood alcohol concentration.

wine may speed up alcohol intoxication by helping
          the activity of acetaldehyde, a metabolite of
          the partial oxidation of ethanol by the

          group), and is often abbreviated as EtOH.

acronyms (some pronounceable, some initialism) or grammatical
Times, DMV for Department of Motor Vehicles), but not always
          understood, particularly in the context of driver's license

          is used, for instance in the Vienna Convention on Road Traffic.

does not require a front vehicle registration plate on
          vehicle or trailer for official identification purposes.

trailer park is an area where mobile homes
Bill Clinton
White House political scandals, suggested “Drag
          policies reflected a centrist "Third Way" political philosophy.

various centre to centre-left progressive movements in
          economic development and social organization are vital to
          keep in mind the substitutability of these

          semantic interoperability of types in a hierarchy,
          such as logic, set theory, model theory,

          correct mathematical reasoning or to establish foundations of mathematics.

metamathematical concepts, with an eye to the philosophical
Metamathematical metatheorems about mathematics itself were originally
          a deductive system (axioms and rules of

          related but distinguishable senses: "logical axioms" and "non-logical

          tautologies
in the language; in the case
          where a tautology is a repetitive statement.

logical tautologies like "Boys will be boys"
          where a tautology is a repetitive statement.

Sometimes logical tautologies like "Boys will be
          where a tautology is a repetitive statement.

 

 

 

Bear

 

awarded a Canada Council grant on the strength
          in dance, interdisciplinary art, media arts, music, opera,
          performing arts, musical arts, digital arts, conceptual arts

          of art, a notion that Joseph Kosuth elevated
          enrolled at the Cleveland Institute of Art on a scholarship.

drawing and mapmaking were added to the
          audience. This is the concern of map design.

Next, the cartographers experiment with generalization, symbolization
          to abstract spatial information at a high level
          of geodata, including vector files, raster files, geographic
          image files
with varying dissemination, production, generation, and
          types of image file compression algorithms: lossless and lossy.


Algorithms may take advantage of visual perception and

          The resulting perception is also known as
          the eye; smell is mediated by odor molecules;
          membranes, olfactory glands, olfactory neurons, and nerve fibers

          of fine axons from the olfactory neurons.

in all animals except sponges and placozoa.

exist for the taxon; the scientific name
          set forth in Linnaeus's system in Systema Naturae
          is considered the starting point of zoological nomenclature.

other systems of nomenclature, for example botanical nomenclature. 

which applies to plant cultivars that have
          cultivars produced by breeding and selection or as sports,
          will sexually reproduce and have offspring together.

Human offspring (descendants) are referred to as
          lineage, affinity/affine, consanguinity/cognate and fictive kinship.

nurture kinship, or familiarity via other forms of
          values from anthropologists' own cultures (see ethnocentrism).

cultural identity, such as language, behavior, customs,
          unique among known systems of animal communication in
          visual display of distinctive body parts or

          hunting
territory for its family or group.

It is distinct from scavenging on dead

carrion, it is also a herbivorous feeding behavior. 

mouth parts and teeth, such as in
Some animals, particularly carnivores and omnivores, also
          muscle, fat and other soft tissues) whether

          tissue connects, surrounds or supports internal organs
          everywhere in the body, including the nervous system.

 

 

 

 

 

statement: WikiPoems are inspired by the chance-based work of John Cage and the N+7 technique popularized by the OULIPO as combined with my interest in digital poetry and hypertextual media. To compose them, I began on the Wikipedia page of a popular and/or notorious CanLit novel, located the seventh link on the page, copied out seven of the surrounding words (counting the linked word or phrase as just one), then navigated via the link to a subsequent page. This operation is repeated until the poem feels done. There are several other constraints determining formatting and word choice in effect (hyperlinked words/phrases appear in bold, for instance). My hope is that, in mapping a series of associative connections made possible by hyperlinked encyclopedic texts, these poems emulate the intertextual relationships we as a culture form with and between works considered literature.

 

 

 

Kyle Flemmer [photo credit: Sarah Thomas] is an author, editor, and publisher from Calgary in Treaty 7 territory. He studies digital poetics at the University of Calgary where he is a teaching and research assistant. Kyle founded the Blasted Tree Publishing Co. in 2014 and is a former managing editor of filling Station magazine. His first book, Barcode Poetry, was published by The Blasted Tree in 2021.

 

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