Xenocracies Everywhere Really Soon

The Island Fringe Festival had its launch party last night at Marc’s Lounge, and Oliver decided that he wanted, at the last minute, to respond to the open call for poets to read “found poetry.”

Fortunately the Fringe team is on the ball and digitally-engaged, so the request-to-perform reached them in time for him to make the list. And so we headed over to secure a seat around 7:30 p.m. for an 8:00 p.m. start.

Because of Prince Edward Island’s antediluvian liquor laws, Oliver was only allowed to be present until 9:00 p.m., and so there was some last minute stress surrounding whether he’d be able to go on stage before turning into a Prohibition pumpkin, but, again the Fringe team rose to the challenge and made sure he was on in the first hour.

Oliver is a master of the acrostic poem, an excellent adaptation that accommodates he’s need to express with his challenges with choices: it’s a poetic hook to hang his hat on, so to speak, and to watch him pull a poem out of the digital ether is a sight to behold.

Here’s the poem he read:

Had
IPods
Pluto
Songza
That are now Things of the Recent Past
Extinct
Revolutionized Cities
Short Vine Videos

Yearning for
Unoriginal Objects
Continuing to Recreate 
Completed Things
In the Present
Existing Past
Since Then

Many Revolutionized Cities and Had
IPods and Pluto
Leaned
Lots
Extinct
Now Not New
IPods
Another
Last Generation That are Now Things of the Recent Past
Short Vine Videos and Songza

Growing Generation
Everyday
New
Era
Recreate
Atari
Today
It
Only Continues to Grow
Now

Xenocracies
Everywhere
Really
Soon

I love the phrase “continuing to recreate completes things in the present.”

There was an intermission of sorts just before 9:00 p.m., and Oliver insisted we high-tail it for the door lest the Provincial Treasurer come and haul us out by the coat tails.

Oliver before his Fringe debut at Marc's Lounge

Comments

Frances's picture
Frances on August 2, 2017 - 21:49 Permalink

Brilliant, Oliver!

Zack's picture
Zack on August 3, 2017 - 00:19 Permalink

Great work Oliver!

Sandy 's picture
Sandy on August 3, 2017 - 08:48 Permalink

Sorry that I missed this. So great, Oliver!

Andrea's picture
Andrea on August 3, 2017 - 11:16 Permalink

Wonderful! Bravo Oliver!

Andrea's picture
Andrea on August 3, 2017 - 11:35 Permalink

Also, I had to look up both xenocracy and yuccies, and have read about acrostic poems. And also ponder over Pluto (is it in reference to the planet or is there something else yuccies call pluto?) So, thank you Oliver for the many lessons.

Peter Rukavina's picture
Peter Rukavina on August 3, 2017 - 11:45 Permalink

Xenocracy was new to me as well, and Oliver explains it well if you ever have occasion to ask him.

I think Pluto is Pluto, although who knows: perhaps it’s a new drug or social media app; “post that up on Pluto so Syndy can see it before she slices…”

Oliver Rukavina's picture
Oliver Rukavina on August 3, 2017 - 12:24 Permalink

I have things that are gone: iPods (iPod Nano and Shuffle), Songza (Google Bought Them), Pluto (Not a Planet Anymore but a Dwarf Planet)
I think Xenocracy is a foreign or outsiders government.

Oliver Rukavina's picture
Oliver Rukavina on August 3, 2017 - 12:26 Permalink

and Vine is Gone.

Oliver Rukavina's picture
Oliver Rukavina on August 3, 2017 - 12:37 Permalink

Generation Xers and Yuccies are Here.

Neil Strickland's picture
Neil Strickland on August 3, 2017 - 13:08 Permalink

I found the following on Urban Dictionary:

xenocracy
a condition in which a country is ruled over by foreigners or foreign forces. (Before independence, India was living under xenocracy. At the time, the British were ruling over the country.)

Oliver Rukavina's picture
Oliver Rukavina on August 3, 2017 - 13:13 Permalink

"Continuing to Recreate Completed Things In the Present" is what is happening now to everything: TV, Movies, Video Games, Etc.

Peter Rukavina's picture
Peter Rukavina on August 3, 2017 - 13:21 Permalink

Yes indeed. It is the creative problem of our times: the increasing reliance on iteration of the 70s and the 80s pop culture brands rather than developing new ideas.

dave's picture
dave on August 3, 2017 - 14:44 Permalink

Terrific.

Susan's picture
Susan on August 4, 2017 - 00:22 Permalink

Well done Oliver!