Endangered Hydrocarbons
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About this ebook
Endangered Hydrocarbons, Lesley Battler's first full-length collection of poetry, shows that the language of hydrocarbon extraction, with its blend of sexual imagery, archetype, science, pseudoscience and the purely speculative, can be as addictive as the resource it pursues.
Using pastiche and wordplay, Battler shines a floodlight on the absurdity and pervasiveness of production language in all areas of human life in the oil fields, including art, culture and politics. Incorporating texts generated by a multinational oil company, and spliced with a variety of found material (video games, home decor magazines, works by Henry James and Carl Jung), Battler deliberately tampers with her found material, treating it as crude oil--excavating, mixing, and drilling these texts to emulate extraction processes used by the industry.With traces of Dennis Lee's Testament, Larissa Lai's Automaton Biographies, and Adam Dickinson's The Polymers, this lively and refreshing take on a polarizing topic will resonate with readers of contemporary poetry who connect with environmental issues and capitalist critique.
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Endangered Hydrocarbons - Lesley Battler
ENDANGERED HYDROCARBONS
ENDANGERED
HYDROCARBONS
LESLEY BATTLER
BookThug 2015
FIRST EDITION
copyright © Lesley Battler, 2015
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
The production of this book was made possible through the generous assistance of The Canada Council for the Arts and The Ontario Arts Council.
LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA
CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION
Battler, Lesley, author
Endangered hydrocarbons / Lesley Battler.
Poems.
Issued in print and electronic formats.
ISBN 978-1-77166-113-3 (EPUB.)
I. Title.
PS8553.A8335E64 2015 C811'.54 C2015-900812-3
PRINTED IN CANADA
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Fracking – tar-sand runoff – dirty oil extraction. This is the language of our oil-addicted 21st-century society: incredibly invasive, blatant in its purpose, and richly embedded in mythological and archetypal symbolism. The ultimate goal of the industry: To core the underworld.
Endangered Hydrocarbons, Lesley Battler’s first full-length collection of poetry, shows that the language of hydrocarbon extraction, with its blend of sexual imagery, archetype, science, pseudoscience, and the purely speculative, can be as addictive as the resource it pursues.
Using pastiche and wordplay, Battler shines a floodlight on the absurdity and pervasiveness of production language in all areas of human life in the oil fields, including art, culture, and politics. Incorporating texts generated by a multinational oil company, and spliced with a variety of found material (video games, home decor magazines, works by Henry James and Carl Jung), Battler deliberately tampers with her sources, treating them as crude oil – excavating, mixing, and drilling these texts to emulate extraction processes used by the industry.
With traces of Dennis Lee’s Testament, Larissa Lai’s Automaton Biographies, and Adam Dickinson’s The Polymers, this lively and refreshing take on a polarizing topic will resonate with readers of contemporary poetry who connect with environmental issues and capitalist critique.
1
EMERGENCE
UNEARTHED
Past Self added you as a friend on Facebook
we need to confirm that you know Past Self
in order for you to be friends on Facebook
wall-to-wall
well, i’ll be damned
never dreamed you’d
remember me
still in Calgary
oil & gas & so
it goes
you soared over the
horror of high school
blue-collar scholarship
kid. honorary poet
everyone’s pet
mock, if you will
but i prevailed. faked a
perfect career arc, if i
do say so myself
Director. Content
Development & Migration
Exploration & Production
Frontier. Americas
a title not even you
could have fabricated
back in Boneyard
Ontario
your bumbling stunt double
cooped up in
your body i prayed
for the day i would
elude our childhood
liberate myself from
pity. eat solid food outside
your ghetto of poetry
i stewed over
the awe in your dad’s eyes
shivered as he slavered over
your As, said you could do
anything you wanted. my
father suited me up
stuffed me in a crop-
duster to seed the family
name over the Emerald
Campus
you moved to Montréal
refused to scut your ideals
& lucre-up
i tripped on the steps
of your post-structural
walk-up, scarfed down
your daily Barthes. you
bled écriture, skated
Lacanian canals. i
sprained my ankle
Skype japes
i finally seceded
relocated my head
office to Calgary
here’s a secret. i
wept that first year
water sign
dumbfounded by
unbound land, i
yearned to return
but no one
could live up to you
least of all me. you
questioned the
ruthless serum
underwriting my
timeshare in this
heartless emirate
i nuked your emails
strummed a Montréal
requiem
surveillance
you pursued me
as clouds swabbed
adobe subdivisions
bobbing beyond
all suns
you watched