A Wake: I am in the Interzone
Perceiving Tangier through an investigation of William Burroughs’ dreamlike writing and Brion Gysin’s technique of cut-ups, the city manifests itself as a parallel, as an other. This thronging sea of relations between, across, and through the urban fabric become permutations of Tangier’s material reality; a pin-cushion of imperial flags, camouflaged and flecked with the wear of its fluctuating history. The undertones of colonialism reverberate in its streets, in its language, in its law.
celestial arabesques rain
upon the cobbles and thrones
pelt,
a skin masquerading dominion,
the greed grins snarls berates its litter
awash the streets melt into another,
swept into the sky all and none
spoke cried softly
the word that has betrayed again,
plurality reigns, it is true