Nouspique

Writings, Reviews, Cultural Criticism

Menu
  • 2020: Journal of a Plague Year
  • 2021: Year of the Jab
  • Cream & Sugar
  • Nouspique: 10 Years a Blog
  • Sex With Dead People
  • The Land
  • The Virgin’s Nose
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

Author: David Barker

The Film Club, by David Gilmour

Posted on February 8, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

It’s difficult to decide what The Film Club is. It purports to be literary non-fiction and was nominated for the 2008 Charles Taylor Prize for Literary Non-Fiction. Gilmour himself identifies the book as “true” and notes, in an afterword, the challenges of writing honestly about people you are in a relationship with — presumably because, if you write too honestly, you may jeopardize the relationship.

Read more

Do you believe in evolution?

Posted on February 4, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

There’s a facebook group called: We can find 1,000,000 people who DO believe in Evolution before June.

Read more

Crazy Love Roll

Posted on February 3, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

A while ago, Vanessa Wells invited me to lead a poetry workshop with her grade 11/12 English class. My mission, should I choose to accept, was simple. She wanted me to demonstrate a few basic ideas…

Read more

Fight Clubs for Jesus

Posted on February 2, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

According to the New York Times, an estimated 700 evangelical churches in the U.S. have mixed martial arts ministries. Yes. Rub your eyes and read that again.

Read more

Conceptual Metaphor Theory (CMT)

Posted on February 2, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

How many times have you heard someone say: “But it’s only a metaphor”? While this phrase can crop up in conversations about any discipline, it seems to make itself heard most often in complaints about Christian fundamentalists who have chosen to interpret one or another Biblical text in literal terms.

Read more

A Lesson in Humiliation from David Bezmozgis

Posted on February 1, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

Born in Riga, Latvia, in 1973, Bezmozgis came to Toronto with his parents when he was six. His collection of seven stories is, according to one reviewer, loosely autobiographical and presents us with a series of vignettes from the point of view of his fictional alter-ego, Mark Berman.

Read more

On-off, Chicken-egg

Posted on January 31, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

The on/off switch. The transistor. The basis of binary code. What if it’s all wrong?

Read more

A Fair Country, by John Ralston Saul

Posted on January 28, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

In A Fair Country, John Ralston Saul offers another account as to why we find it so difficult to engage one another without recourse to polarizing habits. In brief: Canada has inherited from both France and England a colonial perspective. In fact, Canada is doubly colonized when one considers Trudeau’s statement that living in Canada is like sleeping beside an elephant; in subtle ways, we have been culturally and economically subjugated by the U.S.

Read more

Tofu Pies – Weapons of Mass Instruction

Posted on January 27, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

MP Gerry Byrne thinks that throwing a pie at a public servant falls within the definition of terrorism. This brilliant suggestion came after Fisheries Minister, Gail Shea, got a cream pie full in the face while speechifying in Burlington, ON on Jan. 25th.

Read more

Poem: The Fall

Posted on January 24, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

how great the fallcrashing down around my headhow great the dread i feelwhen winter breathes her first chillacross the landthe great hoar undresses gnarled limbsthen laughs her limpid taunts how i hate her voicethe icy screech of it grates on my brainit bodes a pernicious nothingthe mind asleeptoo tired even to dreamthe swirl of flakes…

Read more

Poem: Age of Radicals

Posted on January 24, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

When I was a teenit was inconceivablethat I might find radicaltucked in the foldsof an old man’s face.Now in my forties(though with a boy’s libido)I see in the mirrorhow the first lines crackmy youthful veneer.From mid-day the dawn lightlooks the same as the dusk.Which explains why old fogiesspend so much time counting changeat the check…

Read more

Poem: My Therapist

Posted on January 24, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

My therapist asked me:What are you thinking?I said: Nothing.My therapist said to me:No one thinks nothing;there’s always a new thoughtmoiling to the surface.So I made something upand she pretended to be pleased. My therapist asked me:What does it mean?I said: Nothing.My therapist said to me:Doesn’t matter what you tell me–even your grocery list–it all has…

Read more

Ethical Drug Cartels

Posted on January 24, 2010October 17, 2022 by David Barker

Barry Schwartz suggests that we should not teach ethics courses because that puts ethical lessons into a box and divorces them from the practical context in which ethical problems arise.

Read more

Polarized Discourse at Christmas

Posted on December 23, 2009October 17, 2022 by David Barker

Why have our conversations become so polarized? Think of the news this year. Think of how the stories have lined up depending upon the source.

Read more

Poem: A Matter Of Taste

Posted on December 2, 2009October 17, 2022 by David Barker

“There’s a hint of -”“Pepper,” you say.“Exactly,” and the steward bobslike those dipsomaniac birdswhile I swirl, sniff, sip.I tilt as if for shots.Yay or nay, or checkbox,or I approve, then a jetof purplish juiceinto the canister. I pride myself on the subtletiesI hear in orchestration:violas from within the strings,they rise and then they sing,they sing…

Read more
  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 64
  • 65
  • 66
  • 67
  • 68
  • 69
  • 70
  • …
  • 83
  • Next

Search

Categories

  • Elbow
  • Hands
  • Head
  • Heart
  • Spleen

Tags

Advertising (26) America (38) Black & White (129) Books (329) Canada (43) CanLit (80) Covid-19 (63) Cultural Criticism (50) Death (27) Fiction (77) Graffiti (40) Homeless (26) Humour (51) Justice (27) Media (26) Mental Health (29) Movies (27) Night Photography (27) Non-fiction (43) Novels (118) Ontario (39) People (51) Philosophy (26) Photography (53) Poems (87) Poetry (131) Politics (63) Pop Culture (50) Protest (28) Publishing (24) Reading (26) Reflection (27) Religion (111) Review (221) Satire (52) Scotland (28) Story (89) Street Art (30) Street Photography (170) Suburbia (27) Technology (54) Toronto (228) Travel (42) Urban (62) Writing (43)

Recent Comments

  • Ross Macdonald on Percy Saltzman Dies, Leaves Questionable Blog
  • Eric Allen Montgomery on William Gibson’s Jackpot Trilogy: The Peripheral
  • David Barker on AI Generated Poetry: My Love Sonnet to Donald Trump
  • David Barker on So What’s the Skinny on Ozempic?
  • Lydia Burton on So What’s the Skinny on Ozempic?
©2025 Nouspique