How Christian Bök made a bacterium write poetry to him

Watch our animated explanation of how it works — and how it could outlive us all

Media | Poet Christian Bök is putting words in E. coli

Caption: The Canadian experimental writer has been working for 14 years to make living organisms read his poetry to him, and his dream has finally become a reality.

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Poet Christian (external link)Bök(external link) (pronounced "book") has been writing poetry for years. In 2001, his book Eunoia(external link) won the Griffin Poetry Prize for best new collection by a living Canadian. And he's always been a conceptual poet, thinking about poetry in terms that range from Lego to the Rubik's Cube to radically new invented languages.
But with The Xenotext, Bök has taken poetry a step further(external link) — he's found a way to make a bacterium, E. coli, talk back to him.
In this segment, which artist Carolyn Tripp(external link) (an Exhibitionist in Residence alum) has animated, Bök explains his meticulous process to CBC Arts, and why Bök's process may be the only way that our words will still exist, in a billion years.
Christian Bök will be appearing at Ottawa's Versefest(external link) on March 20th, and at the Edmonton Poetry Festival(external link) that runs April 19-20.
Watch Exhibitionists(external link) Sundays at 4:30pm (5 NT) on CBC.