Dime Bag of Verse

From Plastic Tub

(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 02:12, 22 Dec 2004
Undule (Talk | contribs)

← Go to previous diff
Revision as of 02:56, 31 Mar 2005
Undule (Talk | contribs)

Go to next diff →
Line 1: Line 1:
-[[Image:DimebagofVerse.jpg|thumb|left|Two dimebags from 1994, a very rare example of the form.]]A form of literary distribution built on the model of peddling drugs, particularly the technique practised by street dealers in Washington Square Park or along St. Mark's Avenue, New York City. [[Tim Wilson]] developed the technique, inspired by accounts of Addisson's [[Amway-style poetry samples]]. The procedure was such:+[[Category:Extant Works]][[Image:DimebagofVerse.jpg|thumb|left|Two dimebags from 1994, a very rare example of the form.]]A form of literary distribution built on the model of peddling drugs, particularly the technique practised by street dealers in Washington Square Park or along St. Mark's Avenue, New York City. [[Tim Wilson]] developed the technique, inspired by accounts of Addisson's [[Amway-style poetry samples]]. The procedure was such:
The poet creates the poem first -- preferably on easily-foldable documents, such as receipts, old-glue strips of masking tape, pare strips of any sort but requiring in their structure the fortitude necessary to crouch through the rollers of an analog typing machine, the IBM Selectric -- particular model unimportant. The poet creates the poem first -- preferably on easily-foldable documents, such as receipts, old-glue strips of masking tape, pare strips of any sort but requiring in their structure the fortitude necessary to crouch through the rollers of an analog typing machine, the IBM Selectric -- particular model unimportant.

Revision as of 02:56, 31 Mar 2005

Two dimebags from 1994, a very rare example of the form.
Enlarge
Two dimebags from 1994, a very rare example of the form.
A form of literary distribution built on the model of peddling drugs, particularly the technique practised by street dealers in Washington Square Park or along St. Mark's Avenue, New York City. Tim Wilson developed the technique, inspired by accounts of Addisson's Amway-style poetry samples. The procedure was such:

The poet creates the poem first -- preferably on easily-foldable documents, such as receipts, old-glue strips of masking tape, pare strips of any sort but requiring in their structure the fortitude necessary to crouch through the rollers of an analog typing machine, the IBM Selectric -- particular model unimportant.

Non-Canonical Text


When the Police investigated further, they decided to give him a ticket for loitering and told him to go home.