Due to current methods
of production, distribution and social practices, do fanzines have a place in
today's society?
Introduction – tell them exactly what it is
you’re doing/investigating
Content
Chapter One – context, what is a zine,
production, distribution
Content
WHAT IS A
ZINE
“A novel form
of communication and creation that burst with an angry idealism. A medium that
spoke for a marginal, yet vibrant culture, that along with others might invest
the tired script of progressive politics with meaning and excitement for new
generation.” – Stephen Duncombe
- “Zines are one of the liveliest
forms of self expression for over 70 years” Teal Triggs
- “Zines are quirky, individualized
booklets filled with diatribes, re-workings of pop culture iconography, and all
variety of personal political narratives” Alison
Pipemeier
- “They are scruffy, homemade little
pamphlets. Little publications filled with rantings of high weirdness and
exploding with chaotic design.” Stephen Duncombe
- They are self-produced
- Anti corporate
- Production, philosophy and aesthetic
are anti-professional
- Subject matter is varied as passions
of their creators
- Range across music, comics,
lifestyle, typography, animals rights, politics, alternative lifestyles, clip
art, thrift shopping, beer drinking
- Media created by consumers rather
than by the corporate culture industries
CONTEXT
- Been
liveliest form of self expression for over 70 years – Teal
Triggs
*Graphic Language of punk 1975 – 83*
*Graphic Language of punk 1975 – 83*
- Difficult
to identify specific moment it began
- Started
with depression and drought of 76 and ended with death of Sid vicious in 79 - Hebdige, Subculture, p.g25
- punk not
only about music but about class politics
- Also had
impact on fashion, fine art, film, comics, novels and fanzines
- Mark Perry – own brand of ‘punk journalism’
- Mark Perry – own brand of ‘punk journalism’
- Actively
encourage people to participating in having a go themselves
- Zines
considered by fans as only reliable way of disseminating information about the
music and the movement itself – Teal Triggs
- “You didn’t
know where to look in case you were being ‘sold out’. You could actually trust
that they were going the whole way. It gave you The Word and put what the press
said (which you always did suspect) in a rigid perspective” – Dave Mcullough, Underground, Overground, Wandering Free p.g.
34
- Driven by
political agendas, including class politics and critiques of mainstream
political ideologies
- Also
reflected fact punk had emerged from a position of knowingness about artistic
practice and history
- A graphic
language of resistance
- Freed from
limits and constraints of dominant culture, experiment with new ways of seeing
and being
- “Offer fans
a free space for developing ideas and practices and visual space unencumbered
by forma design rules and visual expectations” Duncombe,
Cultural Resistance Reader, p.g 5
- Unique
visual identity emerged with own set of graphic rules and DIY approach, neatly
reinforcing punks new found political voice
PRODUCTION
- The production of
zines - irregular print runs, limited editions, hard to estimate
- Most remain
hidden, flying beneath radar of mainstream publishing and conventions
- Self produced -
production, philosophy and aesthetic are anti-professional
- Small press
publications
- Methods of
production allow for freedom
- Break conventional
design rules or aesthetics
- Relationship
formed between producer and reader, readers may also be producers
- Zines are virtual
spaces where producers and readers unite in communities of interest or dissent
e.g. in football, each club has a separate fanzine title, but have a collective
voice that can have a real impact on club decisions
- Fanzines designed
to be ephemeral, produced quickly, cheaply, using copy paper, lo fi production
and printing processes, irregular publication and limited print runs
- Leads Duncombe to state that the form is operating ‘against
the fetishistic archiving and exhibiting of the high art world and for the
for-profit spirit of the commercial world’ (Notes From
Underground p.g 127)
BUT... are zines
becoming mainstream/lost authenticity?
- DIY becoming
mainstream
- Question of
high-end zines
- 1997, individuals
within DIY community accused of selling out by trading DIY ethos for commercial
gain
- 80s, 90s, new
genres piquing interest of mainstream
- Co-option by
mainstream culture industry very commonplace
- Process of moving
away from ‘below critical radar’ into mainstream publishing houses - how this
was criticised and why
- Using zines as a
testing ground before entering professional careers
e.g. Jon Savage =
Bam Balam and London’s Outrage to weekly music press to The Face and then
national press and television
Danny Baker = Sniffin’
Glue to NME and BBC Radio
- Fanzines and their
producers became absorbed into consumer culture and mainstream
- Questions around
selling out
- Producers have
become their own makers of cultural meaning
- Construction of
the very pop culture that they critique
- Mainstream
publishing would ‘endanger the alternative, anti establishment viewpoint that
makes zines unique. Are these the last days of Pompeii for the zine world?’ - Futrelle, Been there, zine that
HOWEVER...
- Still maintain
enthusiasm for and commitment to fanzine form as way of expressing individual
concerns, rants on politics, loves and hates, desires, disappointments
- Authentic resides
in authorial voice where personal is political and not beholden to global
corporation (Fanzines, Teal Triggs)
- Don’t conform,
define and manufacture own identity represented through writing and DIY image
making
- Fanzine editors
have simply become producers or makers, which introduces way of thinking about
the producer as a ‘popular author’ and the fanzine as an ‘autobio/graphical’
objects - Jenkins, Mcpherson and Shattuc, Hop on Pop
p.g. 161-62
- DIY nature of
production leads to enhanced value in how they contribute to and reflect a
broader everyday cultural experience
- Wertham, 1972 study, fanzines are a ‘novel form of
communication’, have a unique place in history of communication, design,
journalism, publishing and popular culture
- Wertham observes fanzines ‘exist as human voices
outside of all mass manipulation’
DISTRIBUTION
- Overview of distribution,
by hand, via independent music, bookstores, fairs
- Gift culture
- Primary
distribution versus online distribution (distros)
- Distribution
within subcultures and genres (Punk, Riot Grrrl)
e.g. Punk 1975 - 83,
zines only reliable way of disseminating information, David
Mcullough (1979) distribution of zines against the mass media
- Immediacy of
message, truth of message, reinforced by methods and processes
- Individualistic
medium with the primary function of communication - define a community (chapter 3 of Duncombe’s text)
CASE STUDY 1 - DORIS #4 (1994)
- Creation of
community through distribution
- Immediacy of
person-to-person distribution
- Offering zines to
strangers - how this counters cultural messages
- How this exchange
is different from financial exchange, capitalist distribution
- For-profit
entities
CASE STUDY 2 - Girl Zines - Making Media, Doing Feminism p.g. 78
- Intimate medium
- Small print runs,
particular aesthetic, structure - made for individual
- Process of hand
delivering = enhances intimacy and creates meaningful results
- Zine distribution
differentiates them from other media is particularly visible in envelopes
BUT... change in
distribution
- Social networking now
part of new media landscape
- Concept of
information economy is commonplace in 21st century
- Gutenberg printing
presses sparking literary revolution / online publishing services providing
cheaper forms of printing and distribution
- This has changed business
models
- Now have ‘print on
demand’
- Digital medium is
immediate, inexpensive and widely available
- New modes of
distribution
- Can now be
distributed online, through use of e-zines and blogs which is impacting the
culture of zines both on and offline, underground and over ground
- DIY spirit
prompted migration of print fanzines onto the web
- Difference between
them is in the mode of distribution ‘distributed partially or solely on
electronic networks like the Internet’ What’s an e-zine
anyway?
- There is an
immediacy in technology that allows info to be distributed quickly and
efficiently e.g. updating entries, providing feedback
- This creates a
different sort of connection between reader and producer as this method of
distribution allows for ease and speed of access and receiving feedback - more
so than method of sending off for something in the post
HOWEVER... is this
the best method of distribution?
- As underground is
discovered, paths toward wider distribution and contact are opened up to alternative
cultural creators
- Whether for
reasons of personal gain or public concern, zine writers and creators use these
paths
- While message
contained in content of zines is spread farther and wider than ever before,
radical participatory cultural message of zines is muted
- In process of popularisation and distribution, real message of zines becomes
lost
EXAMPLE in Notes From the Underground, p.g. 166
- Sent “The Curio
Manifesto”, prospectus for a publication “part glossy, pat zine ... that will combine
the traditional magazine format with the best of the zine world for a
nationwide audience”
- “The best of the
zine world” has always resided in the form of zines and the context of their
distribution
- Even if Curio does
contain words and artwork of zinesters, to sell a slick magazine with 50,000
circulation and a “corporate soul to foot our print bill” undermines the entire
purpose and significance of zines
Chapter Two – now/culture, research/isms, ologies
Content
Chapter Three - technology
Content
For Technology:
- Advantages in
terms of blogging and e-zines, and advantages in terms of what technology has
done for print
- Hard to imagine
world without Internet - constantly logging on and off etc.
- Virtual
communities, new digital relationships
- ‘Concept of
information economy is commonplace in twenty first century’
PRINT
- Paradigm shift
taking place in mainstream publishing
- Has created
cheaper forms of print and distribution
- Reach wider
audiences
- Change in business
models
- Print on demand
- Can print at the
time of ordering
- Economic
advantages for small press publishers
- ‘Self publishing
website Lulu allows authors to retain direct control of both design and
production - prompts comparison with DIY ethos witnessed in early zines’ - Teal Triggs
- Digital medium is
immediate, inexpensive and widely available
E-ZINES/BLOGS
- Allows for greater
flexibility to move in between texts
- Immediacy e.g.
updating entries, providing feedback
- Dialogue between
author and reader
- Ease and speed
Against Technology:
“In an age of
electronic media, when the future of the book itself is often called into
question, and when the visual and textual landscape is dominated by an
increasingly voracious culture industry, zines endure.” - Girl Zines - Making Media, Doing Feminism
CASE STUDY - Victoria Law, Girl Zines - Making Media, Doing Feminism
- Created zine out
of year’s worth of email correspondence between herself friend China Martens
- Zine format:
codex, digest size, tan card stock cover, plain printed title
- Zine has no
images, just email messages printed on paper, physically cut and glue onto
sheets of paper and photocopied
- Content = one off
zine, not intended to sell or be widely distributed but meant as an artifact
that would encourage her friend and also document a year of friendship
- Emails themselves
were deficient
- Wasn’t inspired to
archive emails using digital means
- Makes explicit
idea that many creators allude and adhere to: the notion that paper is better
suited for facilitating human connection than electronic media
- Identifies a
letter as a site of physical interaction
- Paper connects two
bodies, bears marks of body that created it as well as carrying other sensory
information to reader
- Paper is a nexus
- Zine creators know
material matters
- “Zines are
different from e-zines, which are ‘zines’ published on the Internet, via
personal webpage or email lists...There are significant differences between the
two genres, and we choose to retain the distinction. When zine World says
‘zine’, we mean something on paper. We only review zines.” - major zine directories
- “Real zines are
Xeroxed.” - Lauren Jade Martin
- “People thought
the Internet was going to herald the death of print, which was a crock even in
the boom days. The feeling of a printed document is never gong to lose its
appeal or be replaced by an electronic alternative.” - Lisa
Jervis
- “Often people who
have never ‘zined’ ask why I choose to print instead of publish online: I state
that it’s obvious - how will we remember websites 5 years or even 20 years from
now?” - Raina Lee
- Arguments from Chris Atton that e-zine appears less distinct, its
culture more amorphous
- Duncombe’s point that the Internet has made
communication too easy and that the deviant socialisation process of the
underground might be lost as a consequence
HOWEVER... blogs and
zines do have similarities
- Labovitz’s definition of e-zines showed they remain
remarkably true to form
- One shared aspects
of blogs and print = MOTIVATION - Jenna Freedman,
online essay Zines Are Not Blogs: A Not Unbiased Analysis
- Many have both
print and digital
- E-zines have facilitated some of the best work in the field: but the
death of print is evidently greatly exaggerated
Conclusion – what do you think, statistics
Content
STATISTICS - Gross,
‘Ideas: zine but not heard’
- Late 80s,
Guardian, more than 10,000 titles of UK football related zines
- 1994, Time
magazine, 20,000 titles produced in US, growing at 20% annually
- 4000 sold in one
month at branch of record chain Tower Records
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