Interview 1.
Interview with Steve Carlton at The Salford Zine Library, Manchester, 3
December 2013
Do you feel
that advances in technology have had a positive or negative affect on zines?
Why?
It's a bit of both, I think, but mainly a positive. People might say
"isn't a zine just a paper version of a blog?" and not see the real
point of zines. The common belief outside of the zine community is that zines
will die because it's much easier to write a blog post and distribute it
online.
This doesn't actually seem to be the case, though. If anything, the Internet
has given zinesters a new way to promote themselves to wider audiences. From
our blog, Twitter and Facebook accounts we've been able to attract donations
from all around the world. That would have been much harder in the "old
days", as it were. Similarly, zinesters are able to collaborate with
people from around the world and have their zines stocked by distros that they
might never have been aware of, were it not for the Internet.
I think also making zines has always been seen as a kind of outsider
pursuit. Because it is so easy to write a blog post, I think zine making is
even more attractive to people who don't necessarily want to conform to the
mainstream. It requires some level of skill and patience (Although how much
skill and patience you have doesn't really matter that much) and it's just a
nice thing to do, isn't it? Anyone can write a blog post and get people to
click on it.
What can
printed zines offer an individual that a blog/website does not?
That's a tricky one - I
suppose it depends on the individual reading the zine or the blog. I think
zines tend to be more personal. I like that someone has spent time and energy
putting something physical together.
Most blogs can be accessed by absolutely anybody - a zine usually has a very short run, and the chances are that you're part of a relatively small group of people who will be lucky enough to read what you have in your hands. It's almost like the person who wrote the zine is talking directly to you. It's closer to receiving a letter from a friend than any kind of mainstream publishing, and I think that's part of what makes zines so special.
Most blogs can be accessed by absolutely anybody - a zine usually has a very short run, and the chances are that you're part of a relatively small group of people who will be lucky enough to read what you have in your hands. It's almost like the person who wrote the zine is talking directly to you. It's closer to receiving a letter from a friend than any kind of mainstream publishing, and I think that's part of what makes zines so special.
Do you feel
that the popularisation of zines can be viewed positively, or has this led to
things like personal gain and a loss of message?
I think it can only
be a good thing. I mean, there are some things, like Topshop trying to claim
that their catalogue is a zine (When it is in no way anything like what most
people consider to be a zine!) in order to look slightly more edgy or cool or
what have you- that's pretty rubbish. But I don't think there's any problem
with zines becoming more popular in general.
The zine library accepts all zines, in whatever format, whatever the content, so if the maker identifies what they've created as a zine then we'll accept it! I think as long as it is self published, a zine can be anything. There is no general "zine message" as far as I'm concerned, aside from a vague promotion of DIY culture, so whatever people want to do with zines is up to them. It's a really cool way of expressing yourself, in whatever way you want to, and I think that opportunity should be open to everyone.
The zine library accepts all zines, in whatever format, whatever the content, so if the maker identifies what they've created as a zine then we'll accept it! I think as long as it is self published, a zine can be anything. There is no general "zine message" as far as I'm concerned, aside from a vague promotion of DIY culture, so whatever people want to do with zines is up to them. It's a really cool way of expressing yourself, in whatever way you want to, and I think that opportunity should be open to everyone.
Interview 2.
Interview with Merrick Badger at Footprint Worker’s Co-op, Leeds, 3
December 2013
Can you give some examples of subject matters of
the zines that you print?
A lot of it is music
based, especially punk and some indie too. A lot of it is political, especially
environmental, anarchist, social justice and animal liberation stuff (we won't
print for any political parties though). And a lot is people's personal arty
projects. There is a lot more beyond that too, zines about footballers
moustaches or cartoons about dogs.
On average, how many copies of a zine do you find yourself printing for an individual?
Probably 200, but it varies from 30 to 2000. Most would be
100-500.
Do you feel that advances in technology have had a positive or negative affect on zines? Why?
Do you feel that advances in technology have had a positive or negative affect on zines? Why?
I'm struggling to think of
negatives. The falling price of copying is obviously a boon. The rise of
computers makes it ever easier for people to organise and design their layout, but
they can still be as rough and shoddy as they want. The barriers of money,
skills and access to technology have diminished hugely, which means the only real
barrier left is 'do you have something to say?’ Likewise, the Internet makes it
easy for people of niche tastes to find each other, and zinesters are just one
group who've benefitted.
What do you think is the
best way of distributing zines? Do you see this changing in the future?
I don't really know. We've
started doing a distro which we've not really got the website going but we do
stalls at zine fairs, roller derby bouts and political events.
What can printed zines offer an individual that a blog/website
does not?
Tangibility and posterity.
The Internet has everything ever, so it's always beckoning you to scroll and
click on to the next thing. With a paper zine you linger a lot more over the
aesthetic. You go back and read the same one repeatedly - when did you ever do
that with a blog post? From the maker's perspective, the greater time and
effort it takes to make a zine means they have given it that bit more thought,
that refining of the ideas that makes it into something that gabs you more. Also,
a blog goes on and on, with a zine you're usually done in 15 minutes; that
sense of interlude, of a brief wander in someone else's head yet getting the
whole story they want to tell, has no online equivalent really. The fact that
zine fairs have burgeoning in the online age proves that they're different
media. Rock music didn't kill off orchestras. It's the same thing.
Do you feel that the popularisation of zines can be viewed positively,
or has this led to things like personal gain and a loss of message?
I don't really see personal gain. Factor in the time spent compiling and editing, folding and stapling, posting, sitting behind a stall, really, who actually makes a living? Who even gets £1 an hour? It's the fact that the medium itself is essentially uncommercial that makes it so good. Yes, the fucking Daily Mail sells well over a million a day, but how many trust it? The thing with a zine is that it only exists because someone thought it should. There's no fortune, no fame, no advertisers or editors to temper the content, it's an open, honest expression. In an age of increasingly polished corporate media saturation they are ever more refreshing as a real human voice, produced on a human scale. The fact of their existence says we needn't be consumers, we can create, and if you're not seeing anything saying the stuff that's in your head, get it said yourself. That's empowering and there's room for everyone to do it. Even the daftest most puerile zine is, in that sense, profoundly political and a big fuck you to advertisers and Daily Mail World.
I don't see what 'message' there is to lose either. The whole point is that they're about whatever anyone wants to talk about; there is no overarching idea that they need to comply with. Imagine if you gran and her friends did zines, how much you'd want to read it. The more people do it the better.
I don't really see personal gain. Factor in the time spent compiling and editing, folding and stapling, posting, sitting behind a stall, really, who actually makes a living? Who even gets £1 an hour? It's the fact that the medium itself is essentially uncommercial that makes it so good. Yes, the fucking Daily Mail sells well over a million a day, but how many trust it? The thing with a zine is that it only exists because someone thought it should. There's no fortune, no fame, no advertisers or editors to temper the content, it's an open, honest expression. In an age of increasingly polished corporate media saturation they are ever more refreshing as a real human voice, produced on a human scale. The fact of their existence says we needn't be consumers, we can create, and if you're not seeing anything saying the stuff that's in your head, get it said yourself. That's empowering and there's room for everyone to do it. Even the daftest most puerile zine is, in that sense, profoundly political and a big fuck you to advertisers and Daily Mail World.
I don't see what 'message' there is to lose either. The whole point is that they're about whatever anyone wants to talk about; there is no overarching idea that they need to comply with. Imagine if you gran and her friends did zines, how much you'd want to read it. The more people do it the better.
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