Authors: Jon Paul Fiorentino
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Poetry, #World Literature
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Copyright © Jon Paul Fiorentino, 2013
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Published with the generous assistance of the Canada CouncilÂ
for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council. Coach House also acknowledges the support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and the Government of Ontario through the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit.
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Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
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Fiorentino, Jon Paul
Needs Improvement / Jon Paul Fiorentino â First edition.
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Poems.
eISBN 978-1-77056-357-5
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I. Title.
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PS8561.I585N43 2013 C811'.6 C2013-904097-8
Neither the Austinian promise nor the Althusserian prayer
require a pre-existing mental state to âperform' in the way
that they do.
â Judith Butler
Dedicated to the memory of Robert Kroetsch
The flesh-splashed summer risk
the long-glare congestion guarantee
the inadequacy of the what-you-knows
the unwelcome breeze, the calming allergens
There are parks and buildings and transport
and then there's your tacit asyndeton:
you remove, you revise, you mute
you want to tell me things you never will
First, you had it in your mind to construct
a rubric, a gift, a translation tool
that would allow us to present things-as-facts
you couldn't find the language
But, with your latest, defeatist polysyndeton,
you found a way to dream
and design and compose
the most pressing need for it
In ill nauset I messaged you
In old Montreal I invoked you
In dead Winnipeg I owned you
I am wrong again
You should heed the words
of your last, last manager
(whatever those were)
In dreary Vancouver I exorcised you
In ruddy Brooklyn I remade you
In perfect Winnipeg I rewrote you
I am wrong again
String prose units, inversions
all the way to rural
Find ways to unthread then stitch up then
consummate lexical decoration then trash it
Your sleeve, your heart, your sleep, your spleen
Prepare existential theses
in medias res
or support local load-bearing relics
Let the winter do its kind work so
steal an almost-vintage jacket
Your layers, your work, your laugh, your use
Ensure your phrases enforce
tenets of exuberance
Don't alter a thing
gain the lowerhand
Your head, your case, your tense
  you're strong
How is your daughter?
Do you still
live in Wolseley?
Do you still
have some issues?
Did they give
you that settlement?
Did it pay off
your mortgage?
Are you still
unemployed?
Are you still
unemployable?
She writes:
I've never had imposter syndrome
because everyone has always had it for me.
And whenever anyone says, âI love you,'
I say, âNo, you are.'
A file break undertow
wishes coma parallel
Phone call collection
agent misery and mulch
Brine dreg cellophane
never-hooded suicide on hold
Common paraplectic sorry
ruin and rune comma apology
I'm too old it happens
it happens
When I said we made a minimal pair
I was deep in linguistic conceit
It had nothing to do with your character
it was strictly labio-dental
189 Allenby Crescent â
swollen breath, gravel
chase me back there, boys
Or recess â
hide under the large slide, descend
above me, girls
Eight-track stereo â
croon dylan's Christianest album
all shag-carpet orchestral
Some basement â
pucks shot with splintered sticks
battered washer/dryer
Vocational high school â
chase Father's white rum with Mother's
diet soda
The perfectly good air â
choke on it
settle for being the perfectly bad son
Now â
the long slide,
the trickle-down dying
When we hate to have been excited by
Winnipeg, what kind of hate do we make? We
ascribe an agency to Winnipeg, a power to
excite, and position ourselves as the objects
of its excitable geography. We hate that
Winnipeg acts, and acts against us, and the
hate we make is a further instance of
Winnipeg, one that seeks to arrest the
metonymy of the prior placing. Thus, we exercise
the metonymy of Winnipeg even as we
seek to counter its metonymy, caught up in a
bind that no act of storage can undo.
The title of âThe Winnipeg Cold Storage
Company' poses the question of collective
memory and what it means to say that âthings
might be done with storage.' The problem of
collective memory is thus immediately bound
up with a question of performance. What
does it mean for storage not only to store, but
also in some sense to perform and, in particular,
to perform what it stores?
Recent proposals to regulate Winnipeg myth
on site, in the facility, and in other similar
facilities, have spawned a set of ambivalent
cultural consequences. The spectre of regionalism
has become a privileged haunting in
which to re-evaluate the cause and effects of
civic shame.
The question of whether citizenship requires
the repression of Winnipeg is not new, but
the recent efforts to regulate the self-storage
of citizenship within Winnipeg repose this
question in a different light. After all,
Winnipeggers enjoy some of the rights and
obligations of citizenship, but not all of them.
To argue that certain archives of Winnipeg are
more properly construed as identity rather than
history sidesteps the question of storage. storage
now appears to be the repression of citizenship,
and if Winnipeg or pornography or the mayor's
office or cold are no longer accepted as âhistory'
then the repression of any of those customs would
no longer appear to be Winnipeg.
Down to my last
lyric
Do you know the word
pilling
?
It's a piling on of fabrications
You wear it well or
wore it
Free-range derangement commences
as denizens make strange with tenses and moods
I saw an old cancerous friend here
who said, âI remember when i used to be creative â
They cut it out of me
all interstitial-like'
Now, the lies and years are
piling/pilling
I will miss you when you shun me. I write these
things for nothing
You remain
the best nothing I know
With decades behind, one still boorishly chases the dull candles
held by those somehow traipsing through the uncomplicated
life; one just an acknowledgements page away from calling it
now, one page away from done. Over it. so very over it. With a
brisk rendering of complexity, shrill and shrugged repeats of
days, and one is an unparented swiller and one's tonic and balm
no longer enough. soon there will be no verb. The countables
wreck their own units; static laughs, lit up and tweak-weary.
diplomacy taints the micropolitic. Countless hours, of course,
spark sluggish decades and one loses games one isn't even aware
of. There is this one thing that all things are made of, one says,
and the dull-witted say, âyes, this.' One does not, should not.
still rhetoric eases. The peculiar sting of fact-unchecked quirkfactor
hymnals and yet one chases slow-moving candles and one
fattens and withers in season â slow metronome. A slow, stupid
metronome. Then, at some point, there is no real verb but an
unrelenting need to call it and to call it in time, listlessly, to call
one's own over it.