Showing posts with label notes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label notes. Show all posts

Thursday, 7 November 2013

NOTES - Fanzines by Teal Triggs

Fanzines by Teal Triggs

- zines = one of the liveliest forms of self expression for over 70 ears
- subject matter is varied as passions of their creators
- range across music, comics, typography, animal rights, politics, alternative lfestyles, clip art, thrift shopping, beer drinking...
- produce in small quantities
- distributed by hand or via independent music or book stores
- were original medium of super nice interest groups and cultural underground
- ephemeral and irreplaceable 
- man have been lost to all but a few passionate collectors
- graphic style has DIY verve
- uninhibited by design conventions - widely influential in mainstream design and popular culture
- made with very basic tools: scissors and glue, photocopier, staples or string
- collaged photos and hand drawn type and illustrations explode across page
- first decade of new millennium has seen flourishing scene
- new generation of graphic designers, illustrators, artists and writers combines the urge to self expression with a rediscovery of handmade crafted objects

Chapter One - DIY Revolution: Definitions and Early Days

- days of small press publications are far from over

- for the most part, they remain hidden, flying beneath radar of mainstream publishing and its conventions
- production is often irregular
- distribution takes place at zine fairs, by word of mouth through independent music shops or bookstores, or through post
- zinesters are less concerned about copyright, grammar, spelling, punctuation or protocols of page layout, grids, typography than about communicating a particular subject to a community of like minded individuals
- print runs vary in numbers
- some are limited editions of upto fifth
- others may be downloaded digitally from internet
- hard to estimate how many zines are produced each year

STATISTICS

- in late 80s, the Guardian reported that more than 10,000 titles of UK football related fanzines alone were in publication
- 1994, Time magazine reported 20,000 titles were produced in US, a figure that was growing a an annual rate of 20 per cent
- 4000 were sold in one month at one branch of record chain Tower Records
*Gross, ‘Ideas: zine but not heard”*

- interest in small press publications and zines has increased over last two decades
- evidenced in plethora of international fanzine symposia and exhibitions and increased number of book compilations of zines published by mainstream publishing houses
- started in late 90s, bustle of activity in US
- Pagan Kennedy, journalist and writer, among first to move from underground to the overground with book Zine: How I Spent Six Years of My Life in the Underground and Finally Found Myself...I Think (1995)
- other zine producers soon followed in a publishing flurry that brought into the public consciousness insights into the everydayness of contemporary life
e.g. Paul Lukas, Inconspicuous Consumption: An Obsessive Look at the Stuff We Take for Granted, From the Everyday to the Obscure (1996)
Al Hoff’s ‘scavenging fun’ at thrift stores in Thrift Score (1997)
Chip Rowe, producer of Chip’s Closet Cleaner (1989), The Book of Zines: Readings from the Fringe (1997) - still sits alongside an accompanying website that continues to provide updated resource with practical how to advice, fanzine directories and interviews with producers

- process of moving from ‘below critical radar’ into mainstream publishing houses was  not without critics or controversy
- by 1997 some within the DIY community were accused of selling out by trading on the DIY ethos for commercial gain
- despite zines being amateur publications, their producers have become their own makers of cultural meaning, taking part in the construction of the very pop culture that they critique
- critics expressed concern that mainstream publishing would ‘endanger the alternative, anti establishment viewpoint that makes zines unique’ and asked are these ‘the last days of Pompeii for the zine world?’ - Futrelle, ‘Been there, zine that’
- on the other hand, not uncommon for zine producers to have intentionally used zines as a testing ground before entering into professional careers

e.g. Jon Savage = Bam Balam and London’s Outrage to weekly music press then to The Face and then national press and television
Danny Baker = Sniffin glue to NME and BBC Radio

- on going debates have not deterred other zinesters from turning to mainstream publishers nor the mainstream itself from co-opting the fanzines as a popular cultural form
- 90s, faux fanzines being published by large multinational companies
- fanzine as an authentic, edgy, political underground into the world above as an item now imbued with commercial hipness

- by late 90s, zines become serious subject for academic study - Stephen Duncombe’s Notes From the Underground: Zines and the Politics of Alternative Culture (1997) and Bob Dickinson’s Imprinting the Sticks: The Alternative Press Beyond London (1997) led the way for a broader appreciation of what had been a subcultural phenomenon 

- DIY authenticity fostered by early fanzine producers has not been lost
- maintain an enthusiasm for and commitment to fanzine form as way of expressing their individual concerns, rants on politics, loves and hates, desires and disappointments
- authentic resides in authorial voice where personal is political and not beholden to global corporations
- continue to operate on margins of mainstream
- disregard traditions of professional design studios and conventions of literary publishing houses
- rather than conforming, zinesters are defining and manufacturing their own identity and representing this through their writing and DIY image making
- referring to fanzine editors as producers or makers introduces new ways of thinking about the producer as a ‘popular author’ and the fanzine as an ‘autobio/graphical’ object - Jenkins, McPherson and Shattuc, Hop on Pop pp. 161-62
- through the DIY nature of their production, fanzines take on an enhanced value in how they contribute to and reflect a broader everyday cultural experience

- Wertham, 1972 study, fanzines are a ‘novel form of communication’, arguing they have a unique place in history of communication, design, journalism, publishing and popular culture
- documents of a social history framed by political, economic and cultural contexts
- Wertham observes fanzines ‘exist as human voices outside of all mass manipulation’
- these voices ‘deserve to be heard’ The World of Fanzines p.g 35
- relationship that is formed between producers and readers
- readers may also be producers but most certainly are fans sharing similar interests
- considered as virtual spaces where producers and readers unite in communities of interest or dissent 
- visible evidence of this process is in football, where each club may have a number of separate fanzine titles, yet have a collective voice that can have a real impact on club decisions

- form of the fanzine and how it’s been made
- both elements feed into our understanding of what is being communicated
- includes design of the layout (often visually chaotic), the choice of typography (either handwritten, or typewritten or using rub down lettering) and production techniques (mimeographed, photocopied or computer generated)
- mimeographing and photocopying are both methods of duplicating, the former using stencil fitted around an inked rum, the latter using now prevalent form of xerography
- rise of computers in 80s, producers began to use desktop publishing packages to generate their texts and layouts
- producers have discovered the art of letterpress printing
- fanzines are usually sizes to be held easily in the hands
- occasionally might resemble more three dimensional objects and incorporate recycled objects or materials, such as old vinyl single records
- advances in technology over the last few years have also changed how we view fanzines with online or digital forms

Fanzines as Graphic objects

- form and DIY process provide some understanding of a history of design and popular culture
- looks the way it does because it is created by a single producer conflating the roles of author and designers
- opens up possibilities for experimentation in terms of a fanzine’s editorial direction and graphic sensibility
- production methods adopted by zine producers allow them to have more freedom in putting together the zine in his or her own way
- often without consideration of conventional design rules or aesthetics

- in Graphic Design profession, debates around graphic authorship came to force in mid 90s
- focus on designer’s practice and process of self publishing
- critic and designers Michael Rock’s seminal essay ‘The designer as author’ 1996 and discussion in ‘Fuck Content’ (2005) provided a platform for re-evaluation the role the designer might play in mediating between form and content
- went some way in legitimising designer’s voice as equal to that of other privileged forms of authorship
- Rock’s proposition was that object as a form could be considered as a kind of ‘text itself’
- design principles such as ‘typography, line, form, colour, contrast, scale, weight’ become devices by which a story might be told
- opens up for discussion ways of understanding graphic object not only by what it means but by ‘how it means’ 
- THIS APPROACH CAN BE APPLIED TO STUDY OF ZINES
- meaning is constructed not only through visual images but also through symbiotic relationship between image, text and graphic form 
- elements communicate ideas and themes
- subtly shape readers’ attitudes, opinions and beliefs
- actively engage with popular cultural texts
- use of photocopier reinforces sense of immediacy of the message
- way in which fanzines are amateur productions suggest they are already situated in opposition to mainstream publishing and its conventions
- fanzines are designed to be ephemeral: produced quickly and cheap;y using copy paper and lo-fi production and printing processes, with irregular publication dates and limited print runs and distribution
- leads Duncombe to suggest 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

Chapter Two - ‘It’s as easy at 1 2 3’ The Graphic Language of Punk 1975 - 83

- identifying specific moment punk began is difficult
- first wave generally been accepted to have had a three year life span 
- began with depression and drought of 76 and ending with death of Sid Vicious of Sex Pistols in 79, Hebdige, Subculture p.g 25
- punk not only about music and class politics
- also had impact on fashion, fine art, film, comics, novels and fanzines
- Mark Perry, developed his own brand of ‘punk journalism’
- actively encourage others to participate in ‘having a go yourself’
- during early rise of punk, zines considered by fans as only reliable way of disseminating information about the music and the movement itself
- Dave Mcullough, 1979 “You didn’t know where to look in case you were being ‘sold out’. You could actually look up to an institution like Sniffin’ Glue and at least 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.” Underground, Overground, Wandering free p.g. 34
- Perry very much aware of new found position as punk provocateur and influence he had on other fanzine producers
- speculated that the success of his zine was due to fact he was honest and told readers exactly what he thought, using graphic language adopted from American rock n roll fanzines
- written for and produced by those ‘in the know’
- had first hand experience as participants at gigs and were often allowed backstage
- interviewed bands directly, getting exclusive stories
- stories in mainstream were usually sensationalised
- punk was viewed as frightening and aggressive, with tabloids such as Daily Mirror and the People using scare stories to criticise morals of burgeoning youth culture

- driven by political agendas, including class politics an 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 p.g 46

- Stephen Duncome suggest that through process of resistance we are freed from limits and constraints of the dominant culture
- in turn ‘cultural resistance’ allows us to ‘experiment with new ways of seeing and being’ Cultural Resistance Reader p.g. 5
- in zines this may be represented through content or graphically, or both where rules and prescriptions are disregarded intentionally
- strategies are easily understood within the subculture and provide a focal point and help establish a community of like minded individuals 

- Reid established connection visually between Dada, Situationism and punk

- despite emerging set of punk ‘conventions’ including small, stapled format, ‘spontaneous’ page layout, production values of photocopier, mixture of typographic treatments such as cut and paste, ransom notes and handwritten and typewritten letterforms, each fanzine maintained an individualised approach 
- manner in which graphic marks, visual elements and layout were presented reflect not only the message but also the individual hand of the producer
*CASE STUDY GIVEN IN BOOK*
- Chainsaw, Sniffin Glue, Ripped and Torn = these examples in spite of their individual handling of basic graphic notation of zines, established overall a recognisable punk identity

Punk Sites of Resistance

- can speak of zines as places of cultural resistance
- ‘offer fans a free space for developing ideas and practices and visual space unencumbered by formal 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

Chapter Three - Liberated Spaces: Subcultures, Protest and Consumer Culture 1980s - 90s

- rise to power of Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Raegan in late 70s, 80s
- new era of ‘free market’ economics born
- encouraged small businesses to develop, saw as co-opting of the individualistic DIY urge that had occurred during punk
- on the other hand, ‘greed is good’ culture that took over financial districts in UK and US provided zine producers with a target
- rhetoric of marketplace
- ‘equated the freedom to spend money with broader political and cultural freedoms’ Frank Mort
- concept of a selling lifestyle
- ‘we are what we buy’ Andrew Marr
- consumption became cultural practice and fanzine producers both capitalised on this and critiqued it mercilessly 
- co-option by the mainstream was continuing
- UK, lifestyle magazines emerged, providing different take on youth culture, inc. The Face (1980-2004), the 80s fashion bible and one time zine ‘style bible’, i-D magazine (1980) founded by Terry Jones
- these bridged gap between post punk and a new king of youth subculture - rave
- graphic reflected the fanzine aesthetic
- streetwise attitude of DIY photography, illustration, typewritten texts
- tapped into a more sophisticated look of the consumer-era zine

Consuming Dance Culture

- rave scene
- gave rise to new occupations - DJs, club organisers, clothes designers, music and style journalists - Sarah Thornton
- fanzines played a role in circulation of knowledge 
- carriers of current slang and latest fashion trends, critiques of club and dance music
- Gear, produced by Camilla Deakin, took advantage of its position ‘below critical radar’ to flour libel and copyright laws
- North of England was notable for zines picking up on way in which rave/house was merging with indie rock
- affiliated with Manchester’s Hacienda Club
- Happy Mondays zine Halcyon Daze (1989) became focus for Madchester scene

Mainstreaming DIY

- 80s and 90s, exciting period for zines
- important to note that alongside newer variants, older genres continued to thrive
- probably true more indie rock zines being produced in this period that ever before or since, same for football and sports zines
- newer genres piqued interest of the mainstream
- co-option by mainstream culture industry was commonplace

*CO-OPTION = the process by which a group subsumes or assimilates a smaller or weaker group with related interests*

- fanzines and their producers became absorbed into consumer culture and the mainstream
- book deals, appearing on TV, radio
- questions around ‘selling out’ were debated
- fanzine world is infinitely malleable
- even as perception of zines becoming anaesthetised by mainstream was taking shape, DIY reaction was also happening 

Chapter Four - Girl Power and Personal Politics 1990 - 97, p.g. 131

- after high point of punk, 90s was a prolific period for zines that were politically motivated
- rise of music inspired riot grrrl movement
- revitalised small press publishing through a slew of new fanzines, including Bikini Kill, Riot Grrrl, and Girl Germs
- helped galvanise a new generation of feminists to continue questioning notions of gender identity, sexuality and representation, queer politics, multiculturalism and equality with male counterparts in music industry and elsewhere

From Punk to Grrrl Revolution?

- came to public consciousness in 1991, International Pop Underground Convention, Olympia
- mainstream press made much connection early on with punk, while acknowledging that many riot grrrls were too young to have experienced punk
- explicit connection between punk and riot grrrl = shared notion of DIY
- punk’s promotion of philosophy that ‘anyone can do it’ prompted young women to pick up guitars and rediscover earlier bands
- 1993, surfaced in UK, bands such as Linus, Mambo Taxi, Skinned Teen, Huggy Bear
- advocated a female exclusivity, not always present in manifestos of earlier female punk bands
- later bands were pioneers of Girl Now Revolution
- fanzines = integral

Personal is Political 

- punk fanzines took authorial position that reflected predominantly male concerns, riot grrrl zine texts often adopted women’s autobiographical approach
- reflect personal opinions and aspirations 
- ‘I choose to write about my life for myself and because I think there is something to be learned from most people’s personal experiences.” Corin Tucker, Channel Seven
- importance of fanzine as a space for a women-only discourse underscored by first line of manifesto ‘BECAUSE us girls crave records and books and fanzines that speak to US that WE feel included in and can understand in our own ways.’
- often criticised motives of mainstream music in press
- often misrepresented
- entire movement was trivialised by mainstream press as being ‘a fashion statement’ Corin Tucker
- Huggy Bear famously practiced media blackout, giving interview only to fanzine products
- fanzines provided a forum in which riot grrrls could critique and reject mainstream media
- represented an uncensored arena for reaching out and sharing experiences

- personal is also reinforced through visual identity of each zine
- took graphic language of punk - photo boot images, hand drawn comic strips, collage, illustration, cut and paste, ransom notes
- but added a set of feminist inspired characteristics
- each producer produced own unique DIY style
- appropriated techniques to add a ‘sweetness’ or visual associations of femininty
- Rebel Grrrl Punk (1997-2000) adorns covers with hand drawn stars and hearts surrounding photos of feminist icons such as Courtney Love
- visual sanctioned the ethos that riot grrrls were both empowered to be feminists and had the choice to be feminine

- can be paradoxical and often iconic
- graphic devices that are considered feminine are pitted against those that are found to be masculine
e.g. Hello Kitty as a third wave feminist icon - provided them with symbol of femininity and at the same time of commodity fetishism
- within context of zines, Hello Kitty is a tool of cultural subversion signalling desire to protest against, but reclaim the term ‘girl’y
- re-contexualised as simultaneously feminine and radical by means of a post punk zine aesthetic of high contrast photocopied imager, degradation of tone into unreadable areas of text and collage like layering

Borrowing from the Mainstream

- draw upon mainstream media imagery
- cut up from newspapers and magazine
- often replicae the content format used by mainstream girls’ magazine e.g. review columns, readers’ pages, feature stories
- riot grrrl producers are in a proactive position of empowerment, operate outside mainstream fashion and lifestyle consumer culture, often in opposition

- never forgot second-wave feminist predecessors
- vehicle for women’s liberation movement
- most significant aspect of graphic language employed by riot grrrl is use of three r’s in the revamped word girl = attempt to reclaim the term but reinforce it through embellishment
- word ‘girl’ is invested ‘with a new set of connotations’ which now may be read as an ‘angry feminist who relished engaging in activity’ Leonard, Rebel Girl you are the queen of my world. p.g. 232
- historians have recorded term ‘riot’ originally derived from passion comment ‘we need a girl riot, too’ in reference to 1991 riots in Mount Pleasant
- term ‘riot grrrl’ is also reported to have derived from Bratmobile drummer Tobi Vail
- term graphically comes to life if ‘riot grrrl’ is visualised and read as an aggressive sounding growl
- multiple r’s have strong impact
- word is simultaneously read and heard
- symbolic and interpreted by different readers and producers to mean different things
- catering for and representing range of voices and audiences it embraces

Girls Grow Up

- 2000, organised first Ladyfest convention
- reclaim word ‘lady’
- Ladyfest Glasgow 2001, aimed to reject conventional role models offered by dominant cultural industries, fanzine programme

- for riot grrrl, signs are that print zines will continue to flourish
- format of printed fanzine as tactile and immediate form of communication reinforces personalised nature of riot grrrl narratives
- intimate experience of reading
- negotiating of public and private spaces
- building social relationship between producer and reader
- explains continued popular of Ladyfest events, set to celebrate tenth anniversary as a global DIY movement

Chapter Five - e-zines 1998 - 2009, p.g. 171

- hard to imagine world without internet
- hardly a day goes by without logging on and off, looking at websites, logging into Facebook etc
- social networking is now part of new media landscape, comprising vast net of personal pages where friends and family meet within virtual communities and where d=new digital relationships are formed
- concept of information economy is commonplace in twenty first century
- paradigm shift taking place in mainstream publishing, brings good news for self publishing community 
- similar to way Gutenberg printing presses sparked off a literacy revolution as books reached wider audience, online publishing services have provided cheaper forms of printing and distribution
- this has changed business models
- ‘print on demand’
- uses online technology to print copies of books 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 witness in early zines
- digital medium is immediate, inexpensive and widely available
- publishing forms are evolving quickly, impact on culture of zines - both on and offline, underground and overground

- fan cultures embrace realm of online publishing through e-zines

QUESTIONS

How has the web enhanced a fan community?
What has the web brought to fanzine production?
In what was has online fan publishing altered the writing and design of zines?

A Brief History of Electronic Media

 - early e-zine producers known as ‘adopters
- ‘experimenters who took the net for what it was, and imagined its possible futures, without trying to bend it to fit the constraints of traditional media like newspapers or printed magazines’ John Labovitz
- DIY spirit prompted migration of print fanzines on to the web
- subjects followed along similar genre headings as print counterparts
- music and science fiction remained common
- new subgenre of technology-inspired productions added to the list

- by 1992, evident a specialist e-zine community was emerging
- despite technological characteristics of new medium, Labovitz’s definition of e-zines showed they remain remarkably true to original form: ‘zines are generally produced by one person or a small group of people, done often for fun, and tend to be irreverent... they are not targeted towards a mass audience, and are generally not produced to make profit.’  
- difference is in mode of distribution, ‘distributed partially or solely on electronic networks like the internet’  What’s an e-zine anyway?

- as technology moved forward, so did way in which zinesters used medium

Pixel Perfect

- ‘ISNT A ZINE JUST A PAPER BLOG? No way! Zines are totally different [not least] because they physical objects that exist and take up space IRL. You can’t hold your blog together with tape and staples; and you can’t hold you zine together with css and html.’  Secret Nerd Brigade 

- what has the web brought to the fanzine concept?
- Chris Atton argues that the ‘e-zine appears less distinct, its culture more amorphous’
- Duncombe’s point is that the internet has made ‘communication too easy and that the deviant socialisation process of the underground might be lost as a consequence’

- many contemporary zines have both web and print presence
- yet intent of online mode does vary

- Librarian Jenna Freedman in online essay ‘Zines Are Not Blogs: A Not Unbiased Analysis’ suggest one shard aspect of blogs and print = MOTIVATION
- readily evident in act of blogging
- blog writing is diary like in tone
- brief descriptive entries regarding specific activity, observation or event that has happened in writer’s life
- template is predetermined for most sites
- relies on blogger writing a couple of paragraphs for each entry
- entries normally run in a linear sequence
- in reverse chronological order
- analogy with traditional print perzines is clear, though purists always defend design and materiality aspects of printed zine
- e-zine websites allow for greater flexibility to move in between texts

- immediacy inherent in technology e.g. updating entries, proving feedback
- comment boxes also provide and record dialogue between content and response or author and reader
- producers of printed fanzines, receiving feedback is much slower
- printed on irregular basis
- sociology of zine reading is altered
- ease and speed with which a blog can be accessed versus the old style method of sending off for something in the post
- DIFFERENT SORT OF CONNECTION BETWEEN READER AND PRODUCER NOW EXISTS

E-Dreamers versus Print Purists

- Matthew J. Smith ‘the potential for community, facilitated in publications like e-zines’
- e-zines have facilitated some of the best work in the field: but the death of print is evidently greatly exaggerated 

Chapter Six - The Crafting of Contemporary Fanzines

- links between zine culture and craft culture, early 90s with emergence of riot grrrl scene
- knitting, crocheting, cross stitch, sewing = reclaimed as part of third wave feminism
- craft moved out of domestic sphere, more into public domain as form of hipster ‘creative expression’

Crafting Fanzines

- exploration of zines as graphic forms - way in which fanzines are intimate graphic objects, holding meaning through form and content but functioning to communicate
- zines = defined by materiality
- often visually chaotic and use scale to advantage, results in an object that can be unusually tactile 
- intimacy derives from fact zines remain amateur, handmade productions operating outside mainstream publishing conventions and mass production processes
- the hand of individual producer or maker is evident in fanzine itself
- history of object is bound up not only with history of zines in general but also with history of individual maker

- 2000, tactility became a trop and was symbolised by increasing use of letterpress and screen printing
- production technologies have always been important to zine aesthetic, but this seemingly more sophisticate use of printing techniques had effect of slowing things down
- immediacy offered by cut and paste and photocopied zines replaced by intentional and time based acts of making 
- as a result... traditional zine aesthetic shifted in the 2000s
- chaotic nature and visual intensity of photocopied pages started to disappear
- zines are now more clearly akin to handmade aesthetic of many small press artists books
- uncluttered design, handmade stock, unconventional forms of binding
- zines have started to appear as numbered limited additions
- nod to recognising the value of time and skills of producers

Crafting Alternative Communitie

- no surprise fanzines are part of growing alternative craft movement
- ‘shifting production back into hands of ordinary people’ Metcalfe
- contributing to lifestyle shift through the publishing of ‘how to’ zines
- zines writing about how to make zines and zines that provide lo-fi how to guides to making you own product or crafts

- main places zinesters go have continued to flourish
- zine festival, small press book and comic fairs, independent book stores
- alternative communities
- micro craft economy
- etsy
- at the same time, virtual networks and communities are also thriving and zines are morphing into new digital formats

- worth noting the shift in the use of terminology among zinesters
- appear to be moving away from favoured idea of networks to development of communities
- complex set of relationships around notion of communities
- difference is in intent: communities build upon a sense of belonging and shared discourse, whether personal or politically inspired
- communities foster relationships through participation
- authorial positions and voices

- active participants in a vibrant thriving zine scene

Tuesday, 29 October 2013

NOTES - Rookie Yearbook One

Rookie Yearbook One by Tavi Gevinson

- Split into months
- September 2011 to May 2012
- Dreamed up a team of people who "so perfectly strike the balance between following their own voices and caring this much about their readers."

- Started Rookie because felt there wasn't a magazine for teenage girls that respected its readers' intelligence
- Started it online because it was best way to spread voices of our contributors far and wide
- Best way for readers to share their own
- Best place for readers to connect with on another

BUT

- Despite how well online prescience worked out, staff had knack for creating work that is more timeless than articles online typically get to be
- More beautiful than photos and illustrations can look on a computer monitor
- Created a Yearbook in an attempt to do justice to best pieces
- Adorned with doodles and glitter, stickers throughout the book
- Couldn't be stared on a screen
- Being able to actually HOLD art and writing that you love is really special

- Initially, seemed like a good venue for pure aesthetic enjoyment and smart, fun writing
- Experiences among typical females her age
- Don't want to think what makes someone "just your average teenage girl" or whether I fit that mold or if that's who will read Rookie

- NOT a guide to being a teen, not a pamphlet on how to be a young woman
- Simply a bunch of writing and art we like and believe in
- Danger of generalising about a whole group of people BUT some experiences are somewhat universal to being a teenager

Themes:

- First kiss
- First love
- School
- Higher learning
- Male gaze
- Halloween (festivities)
- Style icons
- First aid
- Seasons
- Home
- Drugs
- Food
- Music
- Fangirls
- Interviews
- Eating disorders
- Emotions
- Thrifting/DIY
- Make-up
- Life skills
- Hairstyles
- Prom
- Zines

How to make a zine p.g 304

- Self-published, small-circulation, often nonprofit books, papers, or websites
- Usually deal with topics too controversial or niche for mainstream media
- Presented in unpolished layout and unusual design
- Everyone can be an author, editor, art director, publisher - what makes them so awesome
- Invention of the photocopy machine - zine making has been one of the most popular forms of in dependent publishing
- Underground communities

BUT

- Hard to generalise about zines same way its hard to generalise about culture
- Not just hard - impossible
- Zines can be anything and everything, and they are

- Zine making isn't about rules or knowledge, its about freedom and POWER
- Zines are super powerful
- Can communicate rebellious words and strong ideas
- People who feel burning need to share energy with the world make zines
- No coincidence that zine culture is often associated with some of the most energetic movement

* punk
* feminist
* queer

- Some publications that sprang from subcultures, like punk fanzine Chainsaw, enjoyed cult status
- Others, like Bitch, got so popular they turned into regular magazines that can be found in bookstores

- Zines are not looking for a broad audience
- Not supposed to appeal to everyone
- They're exclusive
- Can make a digital zine/mag and reach people on the other end of the planet in a blink
- BUT what's nicer than a little handmade book you can hold in your non-virtual hands?
- OR unique feeling of being one among a tiny group of special people in the possession of a carefully made publication?

Interviews with and writing from

- Daniel Clowes
- Zooey Deschanel
- Lena Dunham
- Sky Ferreira
- Miranda July
- Aubrey Plaza
- Dan Savage
- David Sedaris
- John Waters
- Joss Whedon

Monday, 28 October 2013

NOTES - Girl Zines - Making Media, Doing Feminism

Girl Zines - Making Media, Doing Feminism by Alison Pipemeier

- punk girls play their own music and create their own publications and Bikini Kill’s fans  could shove the booklet into their pockets and take it home to read about what it means to have a revolution
- pocket sized publications, take it home to read
- aesthetics, narratives and iconography that emerge from the experiences of girls in early 1990s

- zines are quirky, individualised booklets filled with diatribes, re-workings of pop culture iconography, and all variety of personal and political narratives
- self produced
- anti corporate
- production, philosophy and aesthetic are anti-professional

- Stephen Duncombe, author of only book length stud of zines, “they are scruffy, homemade little pamphlets. Little publications filled with rantings of high weidness and exploding with chaotic design.”

- messy, photocopied documents that may contain handwriting, collage art, stickers, glitter
- ephemeral underground publications
- impossible to determine how many are in circulation
- one scholar estimated 50,000 in 1997

- cover every imaginable subject matter
- food politics to thrift shopping to motherhood
- example of participatory media
- media created by consumers rather than by the corporate culture industries

- despite predictions of their demise in mid 1990s due to the rise of the internet they are a part of a continuing trend in late capitalist culture

- sites where girls and women construct identities, communities and explanatory narratives from materials that comprise their cultural movement: discourses, media representations, ideologies, stereotypes and physical detritus

- Mary Celeste Kearney “the primary type of media created by contemporary American girls”

“please listen to me you mother fuckers, i, unlike hundreds of boy fanzine writers all across america, have a legitimate need and desperate desire to be heard. i am making a fanzine not to entertain or distract or exclude or because i don’t have anything better to do but because if i didn’t write these things no one else would either.” - Tobi Vail, Jigsaw 3 (1991)

“BECAUSE we must take over the means of production in order to create our own meanings.” - Bikini Kill 2 (1992)

- most studies of zines identify them as resistant media originating in male dominated spaces
- positioned as descendants of pamphlets of the American Revolution and Dadaist and Samizdat publishing
- emerged from the fanzines of 1930s and punk community of 70s
- zine proliferation was triggered by convergence of punk culture and technology
- punk culture provided “zine” terminology, along with non-elitist DIY structure and aesthetic
- ideologies channeled into the production of zines because of technological innovations such as desktop publishing and inexpensive, widely available photocopying

THIS IS NOT THE SAME FOR GIRL ZINES - they are not just a side note to male zines
- they are places where third wave feminism developed
- Riot Grrrl
- exhibit distinctive style, rhetoric and iconography
- the look of these early zines, their playfulness within the terrain of femininity, their use of contradictory visual images, and their expressions of extreme rage and profanity would become characteristic of grrrl zines and the third wave
- common trope in early riot grrrl zines = juxtaposition of seemingly contradictory images and rhetorics e.g. Hello Kitty wearing a Riot Grrrl dress and carrying a teddy bear with an anarchist symbol on its jumper, Action Girl Newsletter
- juxtapositions came to define the third wave aesthetic
- some referred to this as “kinderwhore: or “kitten with a whip”
- this aesthetic differentiates the third wave from previous feminism
- no self-respecting second waver would do anything with Hello Kitty imagery other than reject it
- take command of language and make it work differently e.g. manifestos, BECAUSE i believe with my holeheartmindbody....
- indicative of Riot Grrrls’ creative reclaiming of language
- hole = makes reference to the vagina and identifying the hole as part of what defines a woman
- swearing = an effort to articulate rage at an unfair social system, normally reserved for men
- amplify language to meet up with feelings

- excessive expressions of emotion, embrace of denigrating terminology, manipulation of feminine iconography = pervasive among grrrl zines and help make these publications both distinctive and effective

Why Zines Matter

“This is no substitute for envelopes marked with your location, sheets of stationery with your script scratching across parallel lines, feeling the back of the paper and an embossed pattern in the shape of every character formed (because maybe, like me, you press down with your pen, every letter a deliberate creation) the smell of your house on the paper itself.” - Marissa Falco, Red-Hooded Sweatshirt #3 (1999)

- significance of the materiality of zines
- when taught about zines, a significant percentage of students begin to make their own
- many never heard of zines, but when given them they become inspired
- getting hands on actual zines is necessary to ignite a creative urge
- fascinated with different sized pages (some long, skinny 4 1/4 by 11 inches, some an almost square 4 1/4 inches by 5 1/2 inches)
- combination of collage art, comics, scrawled stories on note book paper
- people gravitate towards zines that are visibly different from magazines and other mainstream publication - either by virtue or size or hand-colour drawings or their sheer unprofessional appearance
- zines personally invite you to enter into the zine discourse 
- 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.
- instigate a “gift culture”
- instigate intimate, affectionate connections between the creators and readers
- inspired to become a part of zine community because of physical encounters with actual zines, not by reading anthologised zines
- in a world where more and more of us spend all day at our computers, zines reconnect us to our bodies and to other human beings
- embodied community has implications for the zine medium

*STUDIES OF FIVE ZINES GIVEN ON PG 59*

Paper versus Electronic Media and Fragments of Friendship

- Victoria Law
- created this zine out of a year’s worth of email correspondence between herself and her friend China Martens
- zine format: codex, digest size, tan cardstock cover, plain printed title
- zine has no images, just email messages printed on paper, physically cut and glued onto other sheets of paper and then photocopied
- content = one off zine made primarily for Martens, not intended to sell or widely distribute but meant it as an artefact that would both encourage her friend and also document a year of friendship
- the emails themselves were deficient
- wasn’t inspired to archive the emails using digital means, such as CD or website
- instead, she chose paper
- makes explicit an idea that many zine 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
- “feeling the back of the paper and an embossed pattern in the shape of every character formed” - figures paper as connecting two bodies, so that the fingers of one person respond to the traces of the handwriting of the other
- piece of paper bears the marks of the body that created it as well as carrying other sensory information to the reader
- the paper is a nexus
- technology that mediates the connections not just of people but of bodies
- although blogs and zines are often conflated, zine creators know that the material matter

“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

- zines and blogs do have similarities
- too-easy comparison of the two media obscures the function of the crete forms of zines - the function
- paper can offer a differently intimate connection than emails
- zines demand a level of aesthetic decision making that digital media like blogs sometimes don’t

“Your zine is visual, you have to make a choice, whether it’s pasting clip act or photos or using Xeroxes of fabric or whatever behind your text, or you’ve made a decision to just have text on white pages, you’ve made that choice, but I rarely ever see blogs where people have designed them. Among the people that I know, I think I’m the only person who actually designed their blog...The design element’s really been removed from what you would have in the worst zine; even if its not a good look, it’s an aesthetic. And most blogs, their aesthetic is, you know, one of the templates that was available with Word Press or Livejournal.” Sarah Dyer, create of the Action Girl newsletter

- blogs are easy to create because they are a ready-made technology
- only bloggers with web design skills can play an active role in designing their pages
- bloggers can and do exhibit a great deal of creativity in blog design and content but available blog templates make it easy for bloggers to focus on the text rather than on the appearance of the blog p.g 65
- zines are simpler technology
- no template exists so each element requires choice and each zine is different
- look of zines is individualised and significant in a way that blog aren’t
- necessity of making aesthetic decisions with zines, of selecting paper to be the background, deciding whether to handwrite, typewrite, or word process, is a level of personal involvement that is not as often present in electronic media
- personal, physical involvement meant not only intentionality but also care p.g 66

“To make a really lame analogy, it’s like singles versus albums. When you have a zine, someone collected a bunch of their ideas in some form to make sense to them and put it together as a package, and a blog is something that, even if you decided to sit down and read a whole month’s entries at once, they were not written as a grouping that would make sense. It’s just coming in every day or week or whatever, and this is where I post. So the packaging of the information is completely different. And the reading experience is completely different. I’m sure that people I know who have blogs, if they sat down and did a zine, it might have the voice of their blog, but I feel like you would get something very, very different, because when you put the zine together, you’re really making a whole thing out of all these little pieces and you just don’t have that experience reading a blog at all” - Dyer, personal interview

- Dyer states a zine is conceived of as a unit, an artefact, with beginning and an end, blogs are running collection of ideas

- p.g 69 “It’s almost like getting a personal letter from a  friend...Also, as much as I get information online, there’s nothing like getting something fun in the mail and holding actual paper. The experience is different and more satisfying.” Judyth Stavens, personal interview

- p.g 70 “The glossier and more professional my zine gets, the less mail I get from readers.” quoted in Rev. Phil and Joe Biel, directors, A Hundred Dollars and a T-Shirt: A documentary about zines in the North West US (Portland, Ore.: Microcosm Publishing, 2005)

- Most zine creators reject the commercial aesthetic because they reject the ideology of commercial mass media; rather than positioning readers as consumers, as a marketplace, the positions them as friends, equals, members of an embodied community who are part of a conversation with the zine maker, and the zine aesthetic plays a crucial role in this positioning. - Duncombe refers to the phenomenon of zines encouraging readers to make their own zines as “emulation”

- p.g 73 the zine structure offers a greater sense of intimacy even than other print media. Books van pretend to be a diary or can even be the publication of a diary, but the mechanisms of publication and the formal structures of books make it apparent to most readers that they aren’t actually privy to someone’s confidential information. With zines, there are fewer layers of separation between reader and creator. 

p.g 74 ZINE DISTRIBUTION

- many of these factors - a personalised human connection, informality, the evidence of the creator’s hand - come together in ways zines are transferred from the zinester to the reader
- generally distributed in ways distinct from the consumer culture industry
- aren’t available in most corporate venues that sell books
- independent book and music stores do carry them
- availability online is on the rise but still limited
- online distribution zines known as distros
- primary distribution = person to person or through the mail
- 1990s when zines were in their heyday - traded rather than sold - could get a zine if you traded it for one you had made
- this practice is in decline
- sell from between $1 to $5
- zine distribution is mostly personalised and geared toward creating relationships that facilitate self expression; few dollars received for creation doesn’t cover expenses for producing it
- zine distribution is another component of zines’ meaning
- it’s a factor that’s easy to overlook but helps create embodied community of zines
- creation of community happens when zines are distributed
- the immediacy of person to person distribution and its ability to create community are evident in story of zine DORIS #4 1994 
- process of slipping zine into backpack of girls 
- by secretly offering zine to a stranger, wants to counter the cultural messages that keep people isolated from one another
- zine functions to create community
- exchange is qualitatively different from financial exchanges that make up capitalist distribution methods for mainstream publications where they’re for-profit entities 

*case study*
- most zines are photocopied and therefore not made from on individual but still intimate medium
- print runs are often fewer than one hundred copies, particular aesthetic and structure make zines feel like they were made for individual 
- process of hand delivering zines = enhances intimacy and creates meaningful results
- p.g 78 the way that zines distribution differentiates them from other media is particularly visible in envelopes