Susan's Place Transgender Resources

General Discussions => Hobbies => Writing => Topic started by: Kia on August 11, 2013, 03:47:56 PM

Title: The Xenotext
Post by: Kia on August 11, 2013, 03:47:56 PM
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2011/04/the-xenotext-works/ (http://www.poetryfoundation.org/harriet/2011/04/the-xenotext-works/)

Has anyone else seen this? it's purdy darn cool, poet Christian Bök has devised a synthetic gene that creates poetry!

At the bottom of the article there's a link to a page of his work on the University of Pennsylvania writing site; the first video is a 50min lecture where he explains how the whole thing works.
Title: Re: The Xenotext
Post by: Jamie D on August 13, 2013, 12:46:41 AM
That sounds fascinating.  Could you explain more about a "synthetic gene"?

It reminds me of science fiction.
Title: Re: The Xenotext
Post by: Kia on August 13, 2013, 02:13:19 PM
Well if I understand it correctly, he creates this messenger RNA code with the poem encrypted in it packs that in a retrovirus which implants his code onto the DNA of the cell. The gene that he packs in the virus and then is grafted onto the host DNA codes for a certain string of amino acids that create a protein. That protein is the poem itself since he assigns every letter and a space to an amino acid. So a protein string that read Leucine, Glycine, Proline, Proline produces the word Glee. So it's synthetic in that it's not natural to any cell and works kind of like a flu vaccine.