a place for zinesters - writers and readers
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You might want to try D.I.Y.: The Rise of Lo-Fi Culture by Amy Spencer. It doesn't exclusively focus on zines, but the first couple of chapters cover it.
There is also A Girls Guide to Taking Over the World: Writings from the Girl Zine Revolution, edited by Tristan Taormino and Karen Green. It mainly features excerpts of zines from the Riot Grrrl/first-post-Riot Grrrl era of zines. I haven't finished this yet, and stopped at the zines chapter, but there is also Riot Grrrl: Revolution Girl Style Now! edited by Nadine Monem. I had to stop reading it because frankly it is poorly edited, the footnotes are badly done, and its too British-focused. Not saying that having a focus on British Riot Grrrl bands is bad cos I always wanted to learn more about Huggy Bear (my favorite RG band), but I just think the title of the book is misleading (implying that it is covering the history of Riot Grrrl everywhere) since it heavily glosses over the US, which is where Riot Grrrl originated. I'd say try to find a copy of this at a library cos it's not worth the cost of $30 from a bookstore or $20 from Amazon.
'Copies In Seconds' by David Owen. Not a book on the history of zines but a book about Chester Carlson and the invention of the xerox machine. This is a magnificent book and we should all bow down to Chester at least once a day. Luke/Sticky.
great work! here in UERJ (Rio de Janeiro University, Brazil) I participate in a group that studies the educational possibilites of comics, and the making of zines is an important research. that´s why I made some studies about the history of zines productions in Brazil. I wrote some texts explaning the history of brazilian zines that i can translate to you and send.
You might want to try D.I.Y.: The Rise of Lo-Fi Culture by Amy Spencer. It doesn't exclusively focus on zines, but the first couple of chapters cover it.
There is also A Girls Guide to Taking Over the World: Writings from the Girl Zine Revolution, edited by Tristan Taormino and Karen Green. It mainly features excerpts of zines from the Riot Grrrl/first-post-Riot Grrrl era of zines.
I haven't finished this yet, and stopped at the zines chapter, but there is also Riot Grrrl: Revolution Girl Style Now! edited by Nadine Monem. I had to stop reading it because frankly it is poorly edited, the footnotes are badly done, and its too British-focused. Not saying that having a focus on British Riot Grrrl bands is bad cos I always wanted to learn more about Huggy Bear (my favorite RG band), but I just think the title of the book is misleading (implying that it is covering the history of Riot Grrrl everywhere) since it heavily glosses over the US, which is where Riot Grrrl originated. I'd say try to find a copy of this at a library cos it's not worth the cost of $30 from a bookstore or $20 from Amazon.
don't forget:
ZINE YEARBOOKS
Joe Biel's 100 dollars and a t-shirt
Free Press: Underground and Alternative Publications 1965-1975 by Jean-Francois Bizot
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