Nikki Reimer's Blog
October 11, 2011

Public Lecture: Professor Leigh Gilmore
86 million people worldwide have been diagnosed as
suffering from chronic pain, and the number is rising. As
chronic pain has increased, memoirs about the experience
have begun to appear. This talk examines a cluster of
chronic pain memoirs as a site for negotiating agency in the
face of irremediable pain, and the interleaving at this site of
biomedicine and narrative structure. Autobiography studies
and feminist posthumanism help to frame this inquiry into
the figuration of gendered embodiment and temporality in
chronic pain memoirs.
Fri October 14 th
1 PM
Ike Barber Learning
Center Room 355
Snacks provided
INFO: janice.stewart@ubc.ca
September 12, 2011
Stop UBC Animal Research's months-long investigation of UBC has revealed disturbing details about the university's research. For instance, one UBC researcher has experimented on cats for 30 years. In his papers, the researcher described how he had cut open the backs of cats to expose their vertebrae, inserted titanium screws into the cats' spinal columns to inhibit movement, and built restraint chambers around the cats' exposed vertebra to give researchers access to the cats' spinal columns and to fix the animals in a sitting position for recording sessions.
(From Stop UBC Animal Research Press Release)
Support Stop UBC Animal Research.
April 16, 2011
Deets from TIEV website:

Join THIS IS EAST VAN April 15 - 17 at the Make It! Show.
We couldn't think of a better place than the Spring Make It! show to premier the THIS IS EAST VAN book. Join us this coming wekend, have a glass of wine, and buy a book or two!
Make It is devoted to creating positive opportunities for artists, and designers. On the flip side, Make It is a shopping event that gives enlightened shoppers the opportunity to buy unique, ethically made goods from top artisans from all over Canada...what better way to spend a Saturday afternoon!
Check out the Make It! website for all the details:
http://makeitproductions.com/vancouver/welcome-to-make-it/
I am hoping to Make It! down there either this afternoon or tomorrow......
March 6, 2011
m. nourbeSe PHILIP
Tuesday March 8, 2011
W2 Community Meeting Space, Woodward's Heritage Building
111 W Hastings St. - Suite 250
Doors 7, Reading 7:30
M. NourbeSe Philip is a poet, writer, and lawyer who lives in the City of Toronto. She was born in Tobago and now lives in Canada. She is the author of She Tries Her Tongue, Her Silence Softly Breaks (1988), Looking for Livingstone: An Odyssey of Silence (1991), Frontiers: Essays and Writings on Racism and Culture (1992), A Genealogy of Resistance and Other Essays (1997), Coups and Calypsos (2001), and many other works. Her most recent book, Zong! (2008), uses only language taken from the Gregson v. Gilbert decision, a 1783 legal case resulting from the deliberate drowning of 150 slaves. Among her many accolades, Philip is the winner of the Casa de las Americas Prize, the Tradewinds Collective Prize, the Lawrence Foundation Award, the Toronto Arts Award, and a Guggenheim Fellowship.
presented by the Kootenay School of Writing
*+*+*+*+*+*+*
Thank you to the Canada Council of the Arts for its support of this reading.
February 19, 2011
Announcing
The Capilano Review
3.13 Manifestos Now!

This
special issue of Canadian and international manifestos—including work from Christian
Bök, Marie-Hélène Tessier, Sabine Bitter/Helmut Weber, Gregory Betts, Derek
Beaulieu, Frank Davey, Hadley+Maxwell, and more—examines and revives
the manifesto genre in a contemporary context.
Join
us at the Vancouver Art Gallery
as we launch our issue with
readings by Colin Browne, Margot Leigh Butler, Reg Johanson, Brenn Kapitan, Kim
Minkus, Phoenix, Nikki Reimer, Sheila Ross, Edward Top, and more . . .
February
22, 2011, Readings at 8 pm
We will gather in the exhibition rooms
for the Vancouver Art Gallery's own 'WE: Vancouver – 12 Manifestos for the
City.' Between 7 and 8 pm, VAG
curators will offer a tour of their Manifestos exhibition. Between 8 and 9
pm, readers from TCR's Manifestos Now! Issue will perform. The event is
open to all by donation.
and
at the Teck
Gallery
Opening
Reception and Panel Discussion
March
3, 2011 at 7 pm
Room 7000, SFU Harbour Centre, 515
West Hastings, Vancouver
Selected contributors to TCR's
Manifestos Now! issue are being exhibited by SFU's Teck Gallery. On March 3
we will celebrate the exhibition at a reception and panel discussion with Brian
Ganter, Lisa Robertson, Marie-Hélène Tessier, Pierre Coupey, and Reg
Johanson. The
panel will be followed by a walking tour of the exhibition, which runs from
February 22-May 27.
February 1, 2011
Thanks to Kulpreet Singh's 12 Steps You Can Take post and Julia Trop's Dog Sled Cull post.
--------
February 1, 2011
Premier Gordon Campbell
RE: Howling Dog Tours / Outdoor Adventures Sled Dog Cull
I am deeply concerned about the recent execution of 100 dogs by Whistler sled dog company Howling Dog Tours. I believe that you were as distressed and horrified as I was to learn that these perfectly healthy animals were cruelly and inhumanely slaughtered when they ceased to be economically beneficial to the company.
I am an animal lover and I believe that all sentient beings should be treated with respect and should be allowed to live free of pain and unneccessary suffering. I am writing to you today to ask that you take steps to ensure that such a horrific act does not happen again.
The first thought that I had, upon recovering from my emotional distress at this news, was that these types of cruelties are perhaps inevitable whenever we use animals as an economic driver.
The second thought was that our provincial/federal animal cruelty laws are weak; therefore travesties like this will continue to occur.
Finally, I find it despicable that the individual in question obeyed the apparent command by his employer to cull the dogs, rather than seeking outside assistance. As has been noted in the media, surely rescue groups would have stepped in to help, had they known? I would like to believe that had it been me, I would have alerted the media rather than be responsible
for such suffering. The fact that the public has learned of this due to the worker's WorkSafe BC claim, rather than a whistleblower, is also disheartening.
However, in addition to trying to change hearts and minds around the subject of animal welfare, we need our government to enact strong laws to back us up.
Therefore the questions that I have to ask of you today are:
1) How soon will you be regulating this industry to ensure this doesn't happen again?
2) What are you going to do to ensure that there are high standards of animal care in this province?
3) Why has the province not reinstated public funding for the BC SPCA?
I thank you for your time.
Respectfully,
Nikki Reimer
Vancouver, BC
CC: BC MLAS;
Whistler Town Council; Whistler Tourism; The
Globe and Mail; Times Colonist; The Vancouver Sun; The Vancouver Province
January 24, 2011

The current issue of Vancouver lit magazine Subterrain has published essays by writers Elizabeth Bachinsky and Alex Leslie on their BLACKOUT AT THE CANDAHAR project, an erasure-as-intervention experimental poetry response to the Vancouver Olympics on which I posted last February. The poems, created by visitors to the bar during the 14 day Olympic occupation, were unable to be printed in Subterrain due to "copyright concerns," however Alex has posted a sampling, of which the above is borrowed, on her blog.
January feels like a blackout.
But I'm kept upright by the political energy and activism of the poets around me, like Christine Leclerc and her Enpipeline Project, a 1,173km poem involving collaboration from poets and writers around the world. There is a thoughtful interview with Christine about the project by Daniel Zomparelli over on his Geist blog.
(Disclosure: The writers I reference in this post are all people I consider friends, as well as colleagues. And for this I consider myself fortunate.)
January 3, 2011
07 December 2010
Screaming Weenie's CLEAN SHEETS 2011 Announced
VANCOUVER, BC - Screaming Weenie Productions is pleased to announce the 2011
edition of our Clean Sheets annual development series of original
Queer-themed plays. Screaming Weenie's Clean Sheets will take place in
August at the Roundhouse Performance Centre in Vancouver as part of the 2011
Queer Arts Festival.
Curated by Vancouver theatre artists Seán Cummings and C. E. Gatchalian,
Screaming Weenie's Clean Sheets features up to four plays selected from an
open, nationwide call for submissions. Each script will be workshopped with
a professional dramaturge and actors, followed by a staged reading.
The 2009 and 2010 editions included playwrights from Eastern, Western and
Northern Canada. Participating artists included Jan Derbyshire, Dean Paul
Gibson, James Fagan Tait, Lesley Ewen, Ilena Lee Cramer, Seán Cummings,
Heather Lindsay, Hamza Adam, Siobhan Barker, Marci T House, Liza Huget,
Damian Rumph, Emelia Symington Fedy, Jack Paterson, Daryl King, Christina
Schild and Adrienne Wong.
Deadline for submissions must be post-dated no later than 15 February, 2011.
Details and application guidelines posted on-line at screamingweenie.com
<http://www.screamingweenie.com/>
Screaming Weenie's mission is to produce and promote Queer and sex-positive
performance, to support a strong Queer cultural community, and to create
greater positive public awareness and acceptance of Queer individuals and
groups outside of sex and gender norms. We are committed to the development
of sexual and/or gender Queer artists, and are actively inclusive of all
gender identities, sexualities and ethnicities.
-30-
For more information, contact Seán Cummings directly at
778.840.7132 or sean@screamingweenie.com
I was the desperate little caboose (with a giant caboose) trying to think his way to the top of the mountain….alas, alack. I failed. I spent too much time on the internets, likely, and not enough focused time inside a book. There's always next year, yes?
My last three:
83. The Obituary by Gail Scott.
Like, fuck, yeah. Again. More. Again.
84. Revenge Fantasies of the Politically Dispossessed by Jacob Wren
Narrative how narrative was meant to be written, and read. Brutally darkly comic indictment of the political left's successes and failures. Starkly realistic depiction of human sexual interaction and its fallouts.
85. Poets and Killers: A Life in Advertising by Helen Hajnoczky
Perfect tonic for anyone blindly drunk on Mad Men's gin.
-Nikki
Here is my list:
Prismatic
Publics – Ed. Heather Milne & Kate Eichhorn
Mommy
Must Be a Mountain of Feathers – Kim Hyesoon, Trans. Don Mee Choi
Open
Letter 13th Series, Number 9, Summer 2009. 'Beyond Stasis:
Poetics & Feminism Today.'
Home
On the Range (The Night Sky with Stars in My Mouth) – Tenney Nathanson
The
Dog Who Rescues Cats: The True Story of Ginny – Philip Gonzalez &
Leonore Fleischer
Remember
to Wave – Kaia Sand
The
Value of Nothing – Raj Patel
Food
Rules: An Eater's Manual – Michael Pollan
Vancouver
Special – Charles Demers
Maximum
Gaga – Lara Glenum
Hegemonic
Love PotionJules Boykoff
Tove
Jannson – Moomin: The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip Volume 1
Tove
Jannson – Moomin: The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip Volume 2
Tove
Jannson – Moomin: The Complete Tove Jansson Comic Strip Volume 3
Automaton
Biographies – Larissa Lai
Man
and his Symbols – edited with an introduction by Carl G. Jung
Radi
os – Ronald Johnson
The
Others Raisd in Me – Gregory Betts
God of
Missed Connections – Elizabeth Bachinsky
More
House – Hannah Calder
Andre
Kertesz, The Early Years
Neighbour
Procedure – Rachel Zolf
The
Inquisition Yours – Jen Currin
The
Politics of Poetic Form: Poetry and Public Policy, Ed. Charles Bernstein
For
Her Own Good: Two Centuries of the Experts' Advice to Women – Barbara
Ehrenreich and Deirdre English
White
Shirt – Laurie MacFayden
Adebe
D.A. – Ex Nihilo
Fallacies
of Motion – William Nichols
Standoff
Terrain – Jocko Benoit
Attenuations
of Force – Lori Cayer
Falling
Blues – Jannie Edwards
Learning
to Count – Douglas Burnet Smith
Children
of Ararat – Keith Garebian
Confessions
of an Empty Purse – S. McDonald
Women
and Madness – Phyllis Chesler
Precordial
Thump – Zoe Whittall
The
Underachiever's Manifesto – Ray Bennett, M.D.
Light
Sweet Crude – Nancy Shaw & Catriona Strang
The
Laundromat Essay – Kyle Buckley
Why
Are You Laughing? Open Letter Fourteenth Series Number 2 Edited by
Jonathan Ball and Ryan Fitzpatrick
The
Selves – Sonja Ahlers
Plummet
– Chris Nealon
The
Joyous Age – Chris Nealon
How to
Write – derek beaulieu
Joy is
So Exhausting – Susan Holbrook
The
Sorrow and the Fast of It – Nathalie Stephens
R's
Boat – Lisa Robertson
Television
– Jacques Lacan
The
Prescription Errors – Charles Demers
Dupe!
– Jonathon Wilcke
Presocratic
Blues – Joel Bettridge
Voodoo
Heart – Scott Snyder
Decompositions – Ken Belford
Bardy Google – Frank Davey
The
Rose Concordance – Angela Carr
feria:
a poempark – Oana Avasilichioaei
The
Age of Briggs & Stratton – Peter Culley
Scrapbook
of My Years as a Zealot – Nicole Markotic
Sweet
– Dani Couture
Troubled
– R.M. Vaughn
Breakfast
at Tiffany's – Truman Capote
Body
Breakdowns: Tales of Illness + Recovery Ed. Janis Harper
7
Chapbooks: What Is Venice by Louis Cabri; --that can't by Louis
Cabri; The Last Narrative of Mrs. David Thompson, ed. by Robert
Kroetsch; Ten Simple Questions for David Thompson, recorded by Robert
Kroetsch; Abandon, ed. by Natalie Simpson; Predictions Vancouver
01.31.2010: 5th annual pooka poetry pub crawl, ed. by Warren Dean
Fulton; escraches - Reg Johanson
The
Certainty Dream – Kate Hall
S*PeRM**K*T
– Harryette Mullen
Real
Phonies: Cultures of Authenticity in Post-World War II America by Abigail
Cheever
The
Hayflick Limit – Matthew Tierney
Personal
Development for Smart People: The Conscious Pursuit of Personal Growth –
Steve Pavlina
How to
be Idle – Tom Hodgkinson
Bright-Sided:
How the Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America –
Barbara Ehrenreich
Curves
to the Apple – Rosmarie Waldrop
declining
america – Rob Budde
ex
machina – Jonathan Ball
Quarter-Life
Crisis: Only the Good Die Yung – Evan Munday
Unleashed
– Sina Queyras
Game
Show Reversed – kevin mcpherson eckhoff
Indexical
Elegies – Jon Paul Fiorentino
Inventory
– Marguerite Pigeon
ecologue
– Ken Belford
Every
Day in the Morning (Slow) – Adam Seelig
Recipes
From The Red Planet – Meredith Quartermain
Clockfire
– Jonathan Ball
The
Obituary – Gail Scott
Revenge
Fantasies of the Politically Dispossessed – Jacob Wren
Poets
and Killers: A Life in Advertising – Helen Hajnoczky
December 14, 2010
'Tis mid-December, several days till solstice, several more days till the Festival of Plastic. I've spent the day in a mild state of panic, wrapping various locally-purchased, artist/isan-made items in locally-purchased brown kraft paper to stuff in my suitcase, as if any of that can absolve my participation in the annual consumer-capitalist wet dream. This is the opposite of poetry.

Here's some actual poetry, conceived and filmed by the National Film Board of Canada: an interactive film featuring Jordan Scott's Blert. It is titled Flub and Utter, a poetic memoir of the mouth.

It, like Scott's poetry, is crunchy, tactile, delicious.

