The Xenotext Experiment of Christian B

Bacterium as poem





An Interview with Christian Bök [PDF]. Explanation of project Video 1 , Video 2 . More Videos.

"I have conceived of The Xenotext Experiment, a literary exercise that explores the aesthetic potential of genetics in the modern milieu, doing so in order to make literal the renowned aphorism of William S Burroughs, who declared “the word is now a virus.” In this experiment, I propose to address some of the sociological implications of biotechnology by manufacturing a “xenotext” – a beautiful, anomalous poem, whose “alien words” might subsist, like a harmless parasite, inside the cell of another life-form...."



I propose to encode a short verse into a sequence of DNA in order to implant it into a bacterium, after which I plan to document the progress of this experiment for publication. I also plan to make related artwork for subsequent exhibition.



I plan to compose my own text in such a way that, when translated into a gene and then integrated into the cell, the text nevertheless gets “expressed” by the organism, which, in response to this grafted, genetic sequence, begins to manufacture a viable, benign protein – a protein that, according to the original, chemical alphabet, is itself another text. I hope, in effect, to engineer a primitive bacterium so that it becomes not only a durable archive for storing a poem, but also a useable machine for writing a poem."
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on April 05, 2011 12:58
No comments have been added yet.


David Morley's Blog

David Morley
David Morley isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow David Morley's blog with rss.