Interposition

A review of Interposition by Kaie Kellough

Published on July 2, 2026

Immersive as always, in Interposition, Kaie Kellough writes from inside the circuitry of contemporary life, tracing pressures exerted by capital, surveillance, digital mediation, and algorithmic systems on the body and imagination. The book-length poem probes into what it means to exist within technological infrastructures that have become so pervasive and ambient that they are nearly indistinguishable from reality itself. 

Interposition
Kaie Kellough

McClelland & Stewart
$25.00
paperback
112pp
9780771023729

Kellough is especially interested in what might exceed the algorithm’s reach: rhythm, breath, improvisation, memory, bodily interruption, and, of course, connection. The rhythmic supersedes the algorithmic. The poems move through shipping containers crossing oceans, AI anti-aging marketing, fast fashion, slot machines, doomscrolling, hoarding. The accumulation is relentless, yet the visual spaciousness of the page prevents the poems from collapsing into total suffocation. Blank space becomes formal resistance, a way of preserving breath amid information overload. 

In Kellough’s long poem, the body becomes increasingly financialized and abstracted, folded into speculative systems of value and surveillance. One especially striking passage imagines the speaker 

 

curled inside a financial product tucked 

inside a surveillance drone hoping to gain 

the long view of decimal points, a few timbits, loose grains 

of splenda to suck off in my retirement 

back back back.

 

In surprising and twisting ways throughout, Kellough deftly suggests that the violences underpinning twenty-first century digital culture are extensions and mutations of older structures of domination, racism, and dispossession still humming beneath what Kellough calls the “white noise machine” of the present. 

The form of this poem, any poem, cannot rescue the reader from the structural burdens of daily life, but Kellough suggests that poetic work itself might function as disruption: “my job is to undo … / a subsonic fissure thru the infrastructure.” The line encapsulates the poem’s larger project, one that cannot escape from technological capitalism entirely, but can still expose the fractures already vibrating within it.mRb

Paisley Conrad is a writer and critic. She lives in Montreal.

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