
The Magnetic Memory Method Podcast The Polymathic Poet Who Taught Himself "Impossible" Skills
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Dec 11, 2025 Christian Bök, an experimental poet and author renowned for his groundbreaking Xenotext project, talks about encoding poetry into DNA. He discusses the technical challenges of using extremophile bacteria for this ambitious endeavor. Bök reveals his journey of self-education in genomics and programming to make the 'impossible' feasible. The conversation touches on the enduring nature of art, the resilience of language, and how breaking big dreams into small, achievable goals can lead to extraordinary outcomes.
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Poetry As Durable Information Technology
- Christian Bök encoded a poem into Deinococcus radiodurans to create literature that could outlast Earth.
- The Xenotext reframes poetry as a durable information technology beyond human memory.
Eunoia's One-Vowel Challenge
- Christian Bök wrote Eunoia using strict lipogram constraints, producing chapters with only one vowel each.
- The method forced fresh textures in English and helped make the poetry memorable.
The Bacterium As Co-Author
- The Xenotext treats the bacterium as a co-author that produces a second poem when encoded.
- Encoding into DNA creates emergent, combinatory effects beyond literal transcription.



