3,039 results on '"zines"'
Search Results
2. Reclaim the Night(Life) – Sexual Harassment in the Night-Time Economy: Zine Making as Method and Participant-Led Data Analysis.
- Author
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Lamond, Ian R, Dashper, Kate, Lanham, Michelle, Rossmorris, Hannah, and Lomax, Dan
- Subjects
SEXUAL assault ,SEXUAL harassment ,ZINES ,DATA analysis ,EVENT management ,YOUNG women ,HARASSMENT - Abstract
This short reflective piece sets out the background to the Reclaim the (Night) Life project, an ongoing research project into sexual violence/harassment in the night-time economy of Leeds (UK). This initial output from the project, which has involved a team of five academics from the UK Centre for Event Management at Leeds Beckett University, is based on work produced at a co-creational zine-making workshop. The workshop involved a group of students, from the university, working with their lived experience and using the workshop to support them in undertaking some initial analysis of data captured from a prior online survey. Sociologically, the zine's purpose is to share initial research findings in a way that could engage its target demographic (young women), give voice to some of their experiences, explore zine making as a form of data capture and participant-led data analysis, and act as a prevocational device for the next stages of the Reclaim the (Night)Life research project. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Girls Who Love Girls and Boys Who Love Girlish Dresses: A Chat with Joana Estrela on the Importance of Transnational and Transmedial Encounters for De-Essentializing and Queering Girlhood in Comics.
- Author
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Mandolini, Nicoletta
- Subjects
COMIC book artists ,ZINES ,COMEDIANS ,QUEER theory ,PUBLISHING - Abstract
Joana Estrela, born in Penafiel in 1990, is a Portuguese illustrator and comics artist whose short but rich career path intersects significantly with the concerns of girlhood and the dynamics of the transnational creation and circulation of graphic narratives. In 2013, she self-published the zine, Os vestidos do Tiago, which was later re-published by the independent Luso-Brazilian publisher Sapata Press in 2018 and is now available in English with the title James's Dresses (2019). The zine is a short immersion into the fictional, though quite realistic, world of Tiago, a boy who loves wearing feminine dresses and is not scared of experimenting with them. Despite having a boy as protagonist, Os vestidos do Tiago can be looked at as Estrela's first attempt at representing girlhood, given the presence, in the publication, of crucial aesthetic references to the realm of childhood and femininity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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4. Proverbial teachings on sustainability: critical dialogues on traditional proverbs and zine-making in higher education.
- Author
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Anuar, Aizuddin Mohamed and Mun, Olga
- Subjects
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HIGHER education , *NEOLIBERALISM , *SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
What ethical and political considerations does zine-making raise in teaching and learning across knowledge systems and artful expression? This question guides the critical dialogue about a research project on teaching sustainability through traditional proverbs from Malaysia and Kazakhstan within a zine-making workshop in a UK university. Merging our reflections with that of students and their zine artworks alongside traditional proverbs, we dialogue across two tensions associated with the challenges of proverbial learning as decolonial connections or appropriation, and the politics and pedagogy of zine-making. Through these tensions which reveal the messy, ambivalent, and unsettled practices within the neoliberal university, we offer some reflections for researchers and teachers engaging in decolonial and arts-based praxis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. The Resurgence interview: Ruth Allen.
- Author
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Allen, Ruth
- Subjects
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SOUND therapy , *CARDIOVASCULAR system , *AUTUMN , *POETRY collections , *ZINES - Abstract
The article features an interview with Ruth Allen, a former geologist turned embodied psychotherapist and writer. Allen discusses what motivates her, her views on living a meaningful life, and her aspirations for the future. She reflects on her personal growth, relationships, and the impact she hopes to have on the world. Allen also shares details about her upcoming projects and her perspective on leaving a positive mark on the world. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
6. Information and intersectionality in the digital millennium.
- Author
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Vaden, Mondo
- Abstract
This paper details the importance of virtual and non-traditional information sharing mediums to create better information access outcomes for people experiencing multiple forms of oppression simultaneously. Non-mainstream media platforms and formats like Tumblr and zines, are a valuable potential contribution to the discourse on coloniality, decoloniality, and how resistant knowledges manifest according to the needs of the people who create them. The information sciences are limited as a result of the majority white, abled nature of the field, and Tumblr and zines create a forum for out of the box thinking and re-search that creatively and thoughtfully sidesteps censorship. The paper is via a personal lens of lived experience and aims to uplift the recognition and validation of non-standard methods of information sharing used by BIPOC, Queer, and disabled communities. It underscores how these methods serve as vital avenues for community building, education, and the preservation and dissemination of marginalized voices and experiences. The paper emphasizes the necessity of acknowledging and integrating these unconventional sources into the broader landscape of information sciences, arguing for their value and legitimacy alongside traditional information repositories. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. 1990s Zine Distribution and Understanding the Work of Zine Distros through Their Catalogs.
- Author
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Braun, Jolie
- Subjects
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ZINES , *MARKETING channels , *DO-it-yourself work , *TWO thousands (Decade) , *OPTIMISM , *COMMUNITY involvement - Abstract
During the 1990s zine distros—small-scale, DIY distributors—emerged to become a vital part of zine communities by addressing the lack of established distribution channels, championing the medium, and fostering community. Before distros moved online in the 2000s, some produced paper catalogs to market and sell the zines they carried. These publications are complex documents that offer important information about zine distribution and culture unavailable elsewhere. This article considers the function of zine distros and what their catalogs can tell us. The first section provides an overview of 1990s zine distribution and examines how and why distros emerged when they did, arguing that distros offered something unique and important among distribution methods: distribution overseen by those embedded in zine communities that afforded creators the opportunity to reach a wider but controlled audience within a framework that valued support, participation, and community building. Yet a close examination of distros also reveals some of the problems inherent in these volunteer-run projects. The latter portion of this article analyzes catalogs produced by several distros. Catalogs, although short lived, document an important window of time: the emergence of distros, their optimism and efforts, and the role they played in zine distribution and communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. ‘Day-dreaming’ school climate: a <italic>slow</italic> critical feminist post-humanist c/art/ographic listening to how school feels.
- Author
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Wolfe, Melissa Joy, Higham, Leanne, Mayes, Eve, and Finneran, Rachel
- Subjects
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SCHOOL environment , *CLASSROOM activities , *RESEARCH personnel , *ZINES , *COMMUNITY schools - Abstract
This paper
becomes a mapping of a PhEmaterialist research project, an apparatus entangled with re/making the world that applauds difference in education. Feeling-thinking-making with critical posthumanist work, we affirm that school climate matters and encourage educators’ attention to the fluxing materiality of school climate created through everyday schooling events. Daydreaming aptly accounted for our slow PhEmaterialist-inspired theoretical work, a transgressing and transversing of conventional conceptions of ‘school climate’, ‘methodology’ and ‘pedagogy’. Our school climate project emerges as an experimental mapping of eventful research, a slow research creation process where we attuned to emergent affirming pedagogical relationalities. Students worked alongside researchers over six weeks at an Australian community school, enacting research creation in the making of school climate. Da(r)ta created include voice recordings, reflective notes, written responses, photographs, narratives, soundscapes, zines, posters, drawings and maps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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9. Social Life of Zines and Other DIY Micro-Media Constituting American DIY Communities and Scenes.
- Author
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Verbuč, David
- Subjects
- *
ART & society , *ZINES , *SOCIAL processes , *SOCIAL role , *COMMUNITY music - Abstract
The primary function of zines is often considered to be creative and expressive, and the function of other types of DIY ("do-it-yourself") micro-media as utilitarian (e.g., flyers as promotion), but all of these media also perform important social roles. DIY micro-media (e.g., zines, flyers, Internet pages, graffiti, wall signs, and "thank you" notes) are in this way embroiled in social lives of their makers and help them constitute themselves culturally and socially. DIY micro-media in this way also acquire their own social lives. Inspired by my ethnographic observations of the social lives of DIY micro-media within particular American DIY houses and music scenes, I examine in this article not only the content of DIY zines and micro-media (i.e., to study them as texts), but primarily the social role of zines and other DIY micro-media in the material, social, and affective constitution of DIY and music communities and scenes (i.e., to study them as social agents). Therefore, I show how these micro-media operate as material and media objects that are simultaneously shaped by and shaping human and social relations. By combining zine and micro-media studies with anthropology and material culture studies, I offer in this article a nuanced micro perspective, both ethnographic and emic, of the social processes implicated in the social and economic mutual constitution between media objects and music/art communities and scenes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. Being water: protest zines and the politics of care in Hong Kong.
- Author
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Yam, Shui-yin Sharon and Ma, Carissa
- Subjects
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PUBLIC demonstrations , *ZINES , *SOCIAL movements , *KINSHIP - Abstract
During the 2019 Anti-Extradition Law Amendment Bill (Anti-ELAB) protest, Hong Kong protesters invented, adapted, and deployed a variety of decentralized grassroots tactics of resistance. While understudied, the proliferation of protest zines during the Anti-ELAB movement contributed to an affective community among movement supporters and protesters, allowing them to engage in self- and communal care as they resisted state violence. We argue that protest zines foregrounded a grassroots community of care that encourages political change in the following ways: expand the emotional habitus among protesters and movement supporters to accommodate debilitating bad feelings; promote self-care and embodied emotional reflection as a form of resistance against state violence; contribute to voluntary kinship among protesters beyond the state-sanctioned nuclear family model; and articulate nuclear familial relations as a site of political resistance. By examining how protest zines articulate voluntary kinship among movement supporters, we illustrate how the zines challenge dominant paternalistic institutions to reimagine a more open political future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Loss and the Production of Community Archives.
- Author
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Drummond, Molly
- Subjects
LOSS (Psychology) ,ARCHIVES ,INTERACTIVE art - Abstract
This visual essay concerns the generative capacities of loss in the production and maintenance of community archives and archiving communities. In archival sites, the loss of space through the collection of items, as well as degradation and wear and tear, is a concern that traditional archival practice seeks to address, manage, and mitigate. However, through the discussion of two case studies—a participatory arts company in Stoke on Trent and zine archives and libraries in Manchester and Birmingham—loss can materialize as presence, through damp and clutter, evidence of community activity, and debate and discussion. Furthermore, the author argues that loss is generative of archives themselves by drawing from the ongoing work in the two sites, as well as the emergence of archival practice and debates specific to the communities themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. Fotografía, subculturas y circulación: Reflexiones sobre los skins de Miguel Trillo.
- Author
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Albarrán-Diego, Juan
- Subjects
PHOTOBOOKS ,ZINES ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,AESTHETICS - Abstract
Copyright of Arte, Individuo y Sociedad is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. Vozes Visuais: uma análise do design gráfico punk nos fanzines paulistas.
- Author
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Toyoda Gomes, Viviane Aiko and de Alcântara, Cristiane
- Subjects
PUNK culture ,GRAPHIC artists ,FACTOR analysis ,GRAPHIC design ,ZINES - Abstract
Copyright of Arcos: Design, Cultura e Visualidade is the property of Editora da Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (EdUERJ) and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Zines And Computational Publishing Practices
- Author
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Kendal Beynon
- Subjects
DIY ,zines ,homogenisation ,counterculture ,handmade web ,labour ,Visual arts ,N1-9211 - Abstract
This paper explores the parallels between historical zine culture and contemporary DIY computational publishing practices, highlighting their roles as countercultural movements within their own right. Both mediums, from zines of the 1990s to personal homepages and feminist servers, provide spaces for identity formation, community building, and resistance against mainstream societal norms. Drawing on Stephen Duncombe's insights into zine culture, this research examines how these practices embody democratic, communal ideals and act as a rebuttal to mass consumerism and dominant media structures. The paper argues that personal homepages and web rings serve as digital analogues to zines, fostering participatory and grassroots networks and underscores the importance of these DIY practices in redefining production, labour, and the role of the individual within cultural and societal contexts, advocating for a more inclusive and participatory digital landscape. Through an examination of both zines and their digital counterparts, this research reveals their shared ethos of authenticity, creativity, and resistance.
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- 2024
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15. Body Images in Youth Cultural Media : Perspectives on the Analysis of Visual Expressions of Youth Political Positioning
- Author
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Böder, Tim, Pfaff, Nicolle, Böder, Tim, editor, Eisewicht, Paul, editor, Mey, Günter, editor, and Pfaff, Nicolle, editor
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Exploring Older Punk Women’s Conceptualisation of ‘Punk’ through Participant-Created Zine Pages
- Author
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Way, Laura, Gildart, Keith, Series Editor, Gough-Yates, Anna, Series Editor, Lincoln, Sian, Series Editor, Osgerby, Bill, Series Editor, Robinson, Lucy, Series Editor, Street, John, Series Editor, Webb, Peter, Series Editor, Worley, Matthew, Series Editor, Way, Laura, editor, and Grimes, Matt, editor
- Published
- 2024
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17. Sentiment Analysis of Lithuanian Youth Subcultures Zines Using Automatic Machine Translation
- Author
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Rudzionis, Vyautas, Ramanuskaite, Egidija, Kairaityte-Uzupe, Ausra, Filipe, Joaquim, Editorial Board Member, Ghosh, Ashish, Editorial Board Member, Prates, Raquel Oliveira, Editorial Board Member, Zhou, Lizhu, Editorial Board Member, Lopata, Audrius, editor, Gudonienė, Daina, editor, and Butkienė, Rita, editor
- Published
- 2024
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18. Ripping through a storified place: an exercise in critical breaking.
- Author
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Kravets, Olga and Karababa, Eminegül
- Subjects
TOURIST attractions ,URBAN growth ,ZINES ,PLACE marketing ,STORYTELLING ,DO-it-yourself work - Abstract
This paper is an exercise in critical breaking. We take the promotional material for a newly 'rejuvenated' area in Ankara, Turkey, and tear out images and text. This is not to re-assemble a critical story of the urban development project; instead, we seek to mirror the process of its marketing. We explore the dynamic shifting and splintered nationhood constructed and marketed in this tourist site. This project is distinct in embracing its fragmented-ness into what/if space, embodying divergent historical trajectories. It implicates a speculative aspect, which is consequential for the political imagination reflected within the site. We use zine, as a mode of presentation, which with its DIY ethos mounts a polyvocal critique of stagecraft and a feminist-inspired challenge to heritage storytelling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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19. Click “Non-Textual Output”: Arts-Based Practice-Research.
- Author
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Batey, Jac
- Subjects
COLLEGE environment ,DOCTOR of philosophy degree ,UNIVERSITY research - Abstract
This paper explores arts-based practice research from the perspective of a UK University. In this context, Practice Research is still fraught with complexity that can result in communication issues. It can be challenging to confidently share insights and developments with readers outside of one’s discipline. There can be an overwhelming feeling of having to justify the value of one’s practice and over-explain every element to underline its worth. But what does Practice Research offer us and how can we, in the Arts, effectively communicate this to the broader academic community and beyond? Is there really a difference between practice-based and practice-led research or are there other ways to describe and share what we (academic practitioners) are creating? This paper will draw on specific examples from UK institutions to see how various challenges of communication and justification have been addressed at PhD level, through national research audits of academic staff, which also include considerations of the university research environment. I will discuss examples of successful practice-based research outputs from the University of Portsmouth that were part of the 2021 Research Excellence Framework (REF), a National published research government audit of UK academic institutions. I will show examples of how visual practitioners have contextualized their research outputs so that they can be “effectively shared.” [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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20. Ein Goldstandard des sinnvollen Lebens?
- Author
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Bauer, Katharina
- Subjects
ZINES ,MORALE ,SOFAS ,NUNS ,LAPTOP computers - Published
- 2024
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21. Zine infrastructures as forms of organizing within feminist social movements.
- Author
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Matich, Maggie, Parsons, Elizabeth, and Ashman, Rachel
- Abstract
This paper explores how feminist social movements are organized and re‐generated across and through different media, both online and offline, using the example of zines. We critically examine the emergence and growth of an intersectional feminist zine community through a 6‐year in‐depth qualitative netnographic and ethnographic study. Theoretically, we build on work concerning feminist digital information and archival infrastructures, bringing it together with work on feminist digital activism. We make three key contributions: first to theorize zines and their communities as infrastructures, which cut across the social, digital, and material. Second in understanding the political potential of engagements in zine infrastructures in which the individual and collective are entangled, and third in revealing how the current generation of young feminists move across and work at the interfaces of formats to benefit from their synergistic, but also their agonistic, relations to form new affective solidarities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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22. (Fan)zines colombianos actuales entre constelaciones y contextos de convivalidad.
- Author
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Müeller, Christoph
- Subjects
ARTISTIC creation ,SOCIAL status ,ZINES ,GRAPHIC arts ,COMEDIANS - Abstract
Copyright of Orbis Tertius is the property of Universidad Nacional de La Plata and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. JUST DON’T CALL IT A MAGAZINE: CZECH JAZZ FANZINES OF TWO TOTALITIES (1944-1958).
- Author
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Vidomus, Petr
- Subjects
- *
PUNK culture , *ZINES , *JAZZ , *JAZZ musicians , *MUSICOLOGY - Abstract
The emerging research on music fanzines in Central and Eastern Europe focuses almost exclusively on the production of the late 1980s (such as punk, skinhead, rock, metal), but leaves aside historically older periods. This article maps for the first time the terrain of privately (i.e. illegally) published Czech jazz fanzines across two totalities: in the final phase of the Nazi occupation and in the first phase of the communist regime. The case studies of Okružní korespondence [Circular Correspondence], Boptime and Jazz Express are followed by an analysis of other so far little-known independent publications as well as the so-called semi-official jazz press. I also deal with the issue of the repression of their creators. In the conclusion, I suggest how the research of fanzines and sources of a private nature can contribute to a re-evaluation of the “official jazz history” and to a deeper insight into the lived experience of jazz musicians and their supporters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Existimos y resistimos como retazos unidos: Prácticas narrativas colectivas en contexto activista: Desafíos y respuestas frentea un crimen por lesbo-odio.
- Author
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Monsalve, Yasna Mancilla
- Subjects
TEXTILE arts ,PATCHWORK quilts ,ZINES ,DISSENTERS ,LESBIANS - Abstract
Copyright of International Journal of Narrative Therapy & Community Work is the property of Dulwich Centre Publications and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Fandom and the Cult of the Saints as Alternate Religious Networks: Fanzines and Books of Hours.
- Author
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Fleeson, Nathan E.
- Subjects
CULTS ,ZINES ,CHRISTIAN saints ,RELIGIOUS communities ,FANS (Persons) ,RELIGIONS - Abstract
Many interpretations of fandom communities as religious focus on fandom in relation to the "world religions" and the institutional authority they carry. By way of contrast, the author aims to interpret fandom based on religious practice, primarily the Christian Cult of the Saints as a practice of religious devotion. The perspective of religious practice emphasizes that the communities that form as fandom often exist in tension with more traditional religious networks, similar to saint cults. To demonstrate this parallelism, the author explores community formation around saints and fantasy characters as serious play expressed in books of hours and fanzines. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Reading and Writing for Justice with Middle Schoolers: Zines and Liberatory Composition.
- Author
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O'Connor, Cait
- Subjects
ZINES ,LGBTQ+ youth ,TEACHING methods ,WRITING education ,MIDDLE school students - Abstract
This article explores how zines can be utilized to teach writing to middle school students. Zines, a genre of writing emphasizing liberation and justice, were central to a project aimed at encouraging students to participate in book club readings and subsequently write on themes related to their chosen books. The author concludes by highlighting that zines empower students' voices, allow them a means of queering composition, and enable them to envision a new world. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Publishing Trends of Informal Lithuanian Youth Publications –Fanzines – at the End of the 20th Century and the Beginning of the 21st Century
- Author
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Aušra Kairaitytė-Užupė
- Subjects
fanzines ,zines ,Lithuanian youth ,subculture ,metalheads ,punks ,Bibliography. Library science. Information resources - Abstract
This article analyzes Lithuanian youth subcultural group publications – fanzines (zines) – which have not yet received broader attention from researchers. Paper fanzines started to be created at the end of the 20th century and became popular in the 1990s, spreading Western culture ideas and changing the political, and socio-cultural environment in Lithuania along with technological copying and reproduction possibilities. Using resources from Lithuania’s Youth Culture Digital Archive “Lithuanian Zine Collection” and additionally collected sources, the article analyzes the trends in the creation and publishing of fanzines. By comparing the publishing similarities and differences of fanzines attributed to different subcultural groups, the aim is to understand the cultural context of these publications, their relationship with readers, and the publishing possibilities of fanzine creators. The study applies descriptive metadata analysis and systematization of fanzines, as well as ethnographic research methods (targeted interview, questionnaire, and qualitative interviews with fanzine authors, publishers, and collectors). The research results showed that in Lithuania, mainly in the 1990s, metal music fanzine authors, unlike punks and science fiction fans, created more publications written in English. Metal music fanzines were characterized by greater volume. Science fiction fans’ publications differed from those of metalheads and punks by a greater number of continuous issues and fewer one-time publications. Authors of fanzines associated with punk ideology mostly chose to independently reproduce publications using a copying machine, while creators of metal music and science fiction fanzines more often used professional printing services. The language used in fanzines and its style helped to form a close relationship with readers, revealed the identity traits of subcultural groups, and helped metal music fanzine authors to integrate into the international fanzine culture context. Seeking independence and individuality, fanzine creators disregarded professional publishing standards. Fanzine publishing depended on individual choice, motivation, creativity, reader interest, and technological possibilities (publication reproduction, layout). Fanzines created in Lithuania became one of the main forms of idea dissemination, creative freedom, and self-expression for alternative youth communication.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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28. ZINES AND DIGITAL TASK-BASED PROJECTS: CONTENT-BASED INSTRUCTION AND TASK-BASED LEARNING.
- Author
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Gobel, Peter and Makimi Kano
- Subjects
- *
ZINES , *CROSS-cultural communication , *DIGITAL technology , *LANGUAGE & languages , *CLASSROOM environment - Abstract
This paper discusses using project-based tasks to improve the understanding of cultural theory in a content-based language classroom. The course of concern is a university-level intercultural communication class, where students study a variety of cultural theories and then use these theories to explain cultural artifacts and cultural behavior in a variety of cultures. In previous years, various models of cultural theory, such as those of Hall (1976), Hofstede (2011), and Trompenaars (1997), were introduced to students through readings and lectures. These theories were then used as the basis for essays and final research papers. It was found that students only gained a shallow understanding of the models through readings and teacher-based instruction, resulting in very little thinking beyond the text. It was hoped that using digital projects, creating digital zines, would allow students to illustrate the theories, thus leading to deeper understanding of the models. For each aspect of cultural theory presented by the instructor, students are given a set of digital tasks that help them create a zine. The tasks revolve around the reframing of the theoretical aspect from the readings, connecting the aspect to their own experience, and creating a digital representation of the theory. This story is then presented to their peers as an illustration of the complex cultural theory. It is hoped that by incorporating their own experiences and framing the theory as a story, students will more easily grasp these abstract concepts and incorporate them into their analysis. The preliminary results of using digital project-based tasks in the classroom will be discussed in light of task efficacy, task completion, and the effect of the tasks on motivation and willingness to communicate. It is hoped that these results will provide evidence for the positive interface between CBI and digital task-based projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
29. the to-do list.
- Subjects
ART exhibitions ,ZINES ,SOCCER - Published
- 2024
30. "Thank god for tags"—fanfiction as a reading paradigm.
- Author
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Silberstein-Bamford, Fabienne
- Subjects
- *
FAN fiction , *DIGITAL technology , *SEMI-structured interviews , *ZINES , *HYPERLINKS - Abstract
While starting as an analogue practice in fanzines, fanfiction in its current form, that is, almost exclusively online, is closely entangled with the technology it is embedded in, both Web 2.0 features and specific website infrastructure. This is nowhere better exemplified than on the platform Archive of Our Own (AO3), which hosts over 13 million stories in thousands of fandoms. AO3 is one of the most popular online repositories for fanfiction and growing exponentially, precisely because of how it deals with this slew of data: its system of extensive hyperlinked labelling. Based on empirical participant data from an online survey and semi-structured interviews, I argue that tags offer distinct affordances and affect user behaviour in such a way that new reading practices arise. Tags create a literacy paradigm interwoven with virtuality, relying on links and networks, and featuring a unique set of characteristics that differentiate reading on AO3 from other digital reading platforms, as well as from print fiction. These include "informed" reading, whereby site users know what they can expect from works, "rhizomatic" reading by navigating across the platform along the metadata, even to unfamiliar fandoms, and reading in multiple, which is facilitated by the site's searchability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Translation as Consciousness-Building in the Portuguese Lesbian Press (1990–2002).
- Author
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Holleran, Grace
- Subjects
CONSCIOUSNESS ,FEMINISM ,TRANSLATORS ,TRANSLATIONS ,LESBIANS - Abstract
The following article examines the political potential of the intimate, affective translation practices of Portuguese lesbian feminist activists in the publications Organa (1990–1992) and Lilás (1993– 2002). Both publications, which I analyze through the rubric of the countercultural genre of “zine” or “fanzine,” arose in response to the repression and invisibilization that Portuguese lesbians faced, from criminalization and censorship at the hands of the fascist Estado Novo [New State] dictatorship (1933– 1974) to exclusion from post-1974 feminist groups. Disconnected from any notion of lesbian identity and isolated from each other, the first lesbian activists turned toward experiences and connections abroad to build political consciousness. Using the self-published periodicals Organa and Lilás as their principal organizational tools, they could translate and circulate texts by lesbian feminist authors from countries like the United States, the United Kingdom, and France. In doing so, they simultaneously created an open, egalitarian “lesbian-feminist counterpublic” (McKinney 2020, 19), allowing lesbians to meet each other on and between the publications’ pages through collaboration and expressions of desire. By analyzing the translational practices evident in the content, construction, and dissemination of Organa and Lilás, I identify and elaborate on a translation practice rooted in urgency, intimacy, and affectivity. Through the example of Portuguese lesbian feminism, I suggest that translation, far more than being a linguistic exercise or a transfer of information, has the capacity to be a tool for community-building and consciousness-raising, especially within groups that face marginalization and oppression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Tolkien fanzines, fandom and the literary tradition in the 1960s.
- Author
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Wisniewski, Mark
- Subjects
ARTISTIC influence ,ZINES ,FAN mail ,FANS (Persons) ,CANON (Literature) - Abstract
This article summarizes the manner in which fanzine authors contextualize J. R. R. Tolkien's fiction within diverse literary traditions. Although rarely the topic of academic discussions in the 1960s, fanzine authors regularly contextualize The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and Tolkien's unfinished fiction in terms of genre, canon and literary tradition. After examining and categorizing the authors and texts discussed in 80 fan letters and articles, I found that fan authors are almost evenly divided in the ways they contextualize Tolkien's fiction: as part of the fantasy tradition, as an inheritor of the epic or mythological genealogy, or as part of a third more eclectic tradition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. NEFORMALIŲ XX A. PABAIGOS - XXI A. PRADŽIOS LIETUVOS JAUNIMO LEIDINIŲ - FANZINŲ - LEIDYBOS TENDENCIJOS.
- Author
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Kairaitytė-Užupė, Aušra
- Subjects
- *
HEAVY metal music , *ZINES , *SCIENCE fiction , *YOUTH culture , *ETHNOLOGY research , *PUNK culture - Abstract
This article analyzes Lithuanian youth subcultural group publications - fanzines (zines) - which have not yet received broader attention from researchers. Paper fanzines started to be created at the end of the 20th century and became popular in the 1990s, spreading Western culture ideas and changing the political, and socio-cultural environment in Lithuania along with technological copying and reproduction possibilities. Using resources from Lithuania's Youth Culture Digital Archive "Lithuanian Zine Collection" and additionally collected sources, the article analyzes the trends in the creation and publishing of fanzines. By comparing the publishing similarities and differences of fanzines attributed to different subcultural groups, the aim is to understand the cultural context of these publications, their relationship with readers, and the publishing possibilities of fanzine creators. The study applies descriptive metadata analysis and systematization of fanzines, as well as ethnographic research methods (targeted interview, questionnaire, and qualitative interviews with fanzine authors, publishers, and collectors). The research results showed that in Lithuania, mainly in the 1990s, metal music fanzine authors, unlike punks and science fiction fans, created more publications written in English. Metal music fanzines were characterized by greater volume. Science fiction fans' publications differed from those of metalheads and punks by a greater number of continuous issues and fewer one-time publications. Authors of fanzines associated with punk ideology mostly chose to independently reproduce publications using a copying machine, while creators of metal music and science fiction fanzines more often used professional printing services. The language used in fanzines and its style helped to form a close relationship with readers, revealed the identity traits of subcultural groups, and helped metal music fanzine authors to integrate into the international fanzine culture context. Seeking independence and individuality, fanzine creators disregarded professional publishing standards. Fanzine publishing depended on individual choice, motivation, creativity, reader interest, and technological possibilities (publication reproduction, layout). Fanzines created in Lithuania became one of the main forms of idea dissemination, creative freedom, and self-expression for alternative youth communication. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Zine Ecologies: Creative Environmentalisms and Literary Activisms.
- Author
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Smith, Laura, Cartwright, Catherine, Brennan-Lister, Georgina, Brooks, Emily, Collins, Ffion, Colson, Sophie, Cook, Eleanor, and Munnery, Ciara
- Subjects
- *
STUDENT activism , *ENVIRONMENTALISM , *ACTIVISM , *ZINES , *CLIMATE change - Abstract
Writers, artists, activists, and others are finding creative ways to engage with, and disrupt and unsettle, commentaries on the climate emergency. In this article, we argue that the do-it-yourself ethic and aesthetic of zines (small-circulation, self-published magazines) and zine-making offers a creative and empowering approach to environmental storytelling, and that zines do different kinds of "work" around positioning, narrating, and responding to ecological problems. Through the idea of zine ecologies, we examine the entanglements between zines and zineing, environmentalism, environmental politics, literature, art, activism and protest, and more. The idea of zine ecologies has a dual existence in this article. We use this idea both as the provocation for a minizine that accompanies this article, but also to scaffold discussion of the quiet politics and activisms of student zine projects responding to, for example, an environmental writer, a piece of activist writing, or an environmental issue or scenario. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Feminist, lesbian, and trans solidarity in the German-Polish collective Girlz Get United.
- Author
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Dynda, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
SOLIDARITY , *FRIENDSHIP , *LESBIANS , *POLITICAL manifestoes , *ORAL history , *FEMINISTS , *ZINES - Abstract
This article analyzes the various activities, problem frameworks, and identity strategies around which feminist, lesbian, and trans-solidarity in the Polish-German collective Girlz Get United (GGU) were built. Focusing on oral history interviews with Suzi Andreis, a member and co-organizer of the GGU meetings, this study examined the transnational and intersectional collectivity of the group as a form of lesbian solidarity. Following Emma Goldman and bell hooks, it attempted to consider how the collective, active in the early 2000s, constructed solidarity by being together during integration meetings, various workshops, and sports encounters. The article also examines the content appearing in the bilingual "ggu!" bulletins issued by the group during its active period. It exposes the rupture and contradictions between different ways of building lesbian solidarity: on the one hand, as a positive experience of sociability and friendship evoked through oral history interviews and, on the other hand, as an archival political manifesto told through a zine story of trauma and violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Fanzines: perspectivas anarquistas y anarco-punks en la recuperación democrática argentina, 1986-1993.
- Author
-
Dolabani, Milagros
- Subjects
- *
DEMOCRATIZATION , *CITIES & towns , *NONPROFIT organizations , *ZINES , *MATERIALS analysis , *PUNK culture - Abstract
This work analyzes a corpus of fanzines produced between 1986 and 1993 in various cities in the province of Buenos Aires and the Argentine capital. Created using affordable techniques and materials with non-profit motives, these publications were part of different political-cultural initiatives linked to anarchist activism and the underground punk scene. Adopting a methodological perspective in which the magazines constitute polyvalent and heterogeneous objects, our analysis considers their material, textual, and visual dimensions, as well as the distribution methods adopted. Based on this premise, we aim to recover the residual and emergent elements that engage with the past and present of a period marked by the process of democratic recovery and consolidation. Finally, we trace the connections established between these publications, through the overlap of spaces, individuals, and events referenced within the corpus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Thinking Through 'Zines: A Collaborative Visual Essay Inspired by Systems Thinking, Queering the Museum, and Emergent Strategy.
- Author
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Kletchka, Dana Carlisle, Leathersich, Bekah, Deal, Travis, Freeman, Anna, Harth, Julia, Yanshing Li, Mitchell, Cary, Ripley, Amanda Tobin, and Turner, Abigail
- Subjects
MUSEUM studies ,ART museums ,SYSTEMS theory ,ART education ,ZINES - Abstract
In this visual essay, students enrolled in a museum education and administration specialization, centered in a university art education department, respond to course readings on museum work and Emergent Strategy through journaling and 'zine making. While the course is intended to prepare students for the political and practical realities of working in an art museum, it is structured to elicit group and individual understandings of the readings, projects, and other assignments as well as to consider the ways in which we can collectively and incrementally create museological change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
38. DIY Delivery Systems: Rethinking Self-Sponsorship through Extracurricular Literacy Narratives.
- Author
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Luther, Jason
- Abstract
The article focuses on reevaluating self-sponsorship within contemporary extracurricular writing practices, examining Do It Yourself (DIY) publishing festivals and the materiality of publications. Topics include the evolution of DIY publishing landscapes, the integration of digital tools, and the conceptualization of sponsorship within literacy narratives, emphasizing the interplay between agency, materiality, and desire in writing practices outside traditional academic settings.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Using Zines to Teach Literary Analysis in a Post ChatGPT World.
- Author
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Ingram, Noël
- Subjects
GENERATIVE artificial intelligence ,CHATGPT ,ZINES ,ARTISTIC creation - Abstract
In the age of Generative Artificial Intelligence, where students can generate longform writing pieces within seconds, how do we rethink the process and value of literary analysis? This article details a project from a required first-year undergraduate literature course that used zines to teach literary analysis. This article includes all components of the project, including discussion prompts, scaffolded assignments, and several reflections from students on how this project changed their understanding of and relationship to literary analysis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
40. B4 Small Press Passions: Zines and Scenes of Popular Memory : Women Making History, Sweden. herri, South Africa. BLTX, Philippines
- Author
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Hansen, Anders Høg, Brant, Clare, Series Editor, Saunders, Max, Series Editor, and Hansen, Anders Høg
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. A2 The Folk Singers Cave. First We Take Manhattan, then Stockholm : Izzy Young Mediating Folk Music in New York and Stockholm for 6 Decades
- Author
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Hansen, Anders Høg, Brant, Clare, Series Editor, Saunders, Max, Series Editor, and Hansen, Anders Høg
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. 2023 Zine Awards.
- Subjects
ZINES ,INTERNET art - Published
- 2024
43. AI, Big Data, and surveillance zines as forms of community healthcare.
- Author
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Ketchum, Alex and Morena, Nina
- Subjects
- *
ZINES , *BIG data , *ARTIFICIAL intelligence , *SCIENTIFIC knowledge , *WOMEN'S organizations , *BIOSURVEILLANCE , *FEMINISM - Abstract
This article analyzes the zines, handbooks, and pamphlets on AI, Big Data, and surveillance published in the United States between 2009 and 2020 that aim to democratize knowledge on technologies. The main texts chosen for this article are A People's Guide To AI: A beginner's guide to understanding AI (2018), Digital Defense Playbook/Cuaderno De Juegos De Defensa Digital (2018), Oh! The Places Your Data Will Go (2019), The People's Field Guide to Spotting Surveillance Infrastructure (2019) and the Coveillance Toolkits (2021), the Stop LAPD Spying Coalition's zines (2020); and the five zines produced by the Detroit Digital Justice Coalition since 2009. These publications are part of a longer history of feminist activists printing zines, booklets, and pamphlets to make scientific knowledge more accessible. In particular, these publications build on the traditional use of zines and handbooks by feminist and health advocacy organizations such as the Boston Women's Health Collective and ACT UP in the United States. In addition to following in their suit of explaining technical information by using clear language and providing definitions and resources, these publications on AI, Big Data, and Surveillance are themselves a form of health literacy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. The media operations of postcolonial mobility regimes: The cases of Filmstichting West Indië and Vereniging Ons Suriname in 1940s and 1950s Netherlands.
- Author
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Leurs, Koen and Seuferling, Philipp
- Subjects
- *
ARCHIVAL materials , *ZINES , *CONTENT analysis - Abstract
This article analyses the communication activities of Filmstichting West Indië, which in the late 1940s and early 1950s produced 12 documentary propaganda films about Dutch colonial Suriname, and the resistance against these reductive representations in zines of the Surinamese migrant organization Vereniging Ons Suriname. We draw on hence unstudied archival material to dissect the role of media operations, as persuasive, strategic media productions, in constructing and challenging differential relations between colonizers and colonial subjects, and symbolically negotiating how different territories and bodies relate to each other. A visual and textual analysis of the cases unpacks historical struggles over the regimes of (post)colonial (im)mobilities, as they are produced and articulated within regimes of representation. We ultimately argue that, in order to understand the historical constitution of mobility regimes (and, in order to be able to critique them), we need to study the co-production of mobility regimes within regimes of mediated representation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. solidarity through mail-based participatory visual research: exploring queer and feminist futures through an art, activism and archiving project with 2SLGBTQ+ youth amidst COVID-19.
- Author
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Burkholder, Casey, MacEntee, Katie, and Thorpe, Amelia
- Subjects
- *
SOLIDARITY , *LGBTQ+ youth , *COVID-19 pandemic , *ACTIVISM - Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic posed a logistical problem to our normal ways of engaging in participatory visual research. Our in-person art, activism and archiving with 2SLGBTQ+ Atlantic Canadian youth pivoted to use distanced engagement strategies that met the demands of the pandemic. We sought to create networks of solidarity while we were apart. Monthly, over the course of a year, we mailed out themed packages of art supplies and directions to fifty-five 2SLGBTQ+ youth situated in the Canadian provinces of New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador. Participants then created the artworks, photographed them and contextualised them through text. While the resulting co-curated digital archive includes multiple mediums, here we focus on the participants' zines and dioramas for what they taught us about 2SLGBTQ+ youth's identities, activism, beliefs, friends, home, family, fears, strengths and futures. The digital archive of our artwork deconstructs, explores and affirms identities and functions to build solidarity during a time of increased isolation. We argue that collaboratively building the digital archive was a feminist act of reclamation and a declaration of youth queer activism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Anarchist Domesticities: From DIY Culture to DIY Politics in Consent Zines.
- Author
-
Hines, Frankie
- Subjects
ANARCHISM ,ANARCHISTS ,RADICALISM ,ZINES ,OMNIPRESENCE of God - Abstract
Contemporary radical and anarchist movements have made the home a central site of political contestation in ways that mirror a return to domestic spaces in recent critical thought. This essay argues that an "anarchist domesticity," which is marked by an awareness of violence's omnipresence, finds its clearest expression in anarcha-feminist zines about responses to sexual assault and interpersonal violence. The essay reads these "consent zines" first as texts that reconfigure zines' do-it-yourself (DIY) ethos as a DIY politics and thereby seek to intervene directly in political struggles; and second as texts marked by encounters with traumatic experiences, which provides an alternative explanation for their fragmentary form. As articulations of radical domesticities, consent zines are, I argue, literary texts that speak to vital contemporary political issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Materiality and metalepsis in handmade small press alternative comics.
- Author
-
Brookes, Gareth
- Abstract
This article reconsiders the narratological theory of metalepsis in comics through a discussion of handmade small press publications. I will argue that material and formal elements can collapse categories through which metalepsis is theorized. I will give examples of cases in which traces of the author's body coexist on the object of the comic through both mechanical reproduction and artisanal intervention and argue that this undermines binary metaphors such as 'descending/ascending' and 'inside/outside' through which metaleptic incursions from and into storyworld are understood. I will argue that material aspects, as well as production and distribution contexts, have been under-considered in formulations of metalepsis in comics, and that consideration of these aspects helps us rethink the role that the body of the author and reader play in metaleptic encounters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Football fans' contestations over security: between offline and online fan spaces and channels.
- Author
-
Lee Ludvigsen, Jan Andre
- Subjects
SOCCER fans ,SOCCER ,ZINES ,PUBLIC communication ,DIGITAL media - Abstract
Much like in a myriad of other domains of the modern society, 'security' remains a highly contentious and debated area of 'online' and 'offline' football fan cultures. Against this starting point, this article critically examines how football fans respond to and contest key developments under the aegis of 'securitization' by employing relevant examples from elite English football. By subscribing to the contention that football fandom and its activism may be traced from fanzines to online digital media, this article draws from extant literature, fanzine archival material and digital sources to provide snapshots of two important examples that represent alternative forms of public communication and discourse – namely, (i) fanzines and (ii) digital media. The article's main arguments are that (1) fans' contestations of securitization have followed similar pathways as fans' opposition to other elements of the game; (2) fans' security contestations demonstrate both elements of continuity and responsiveness to emerging issues, and lastly, (3) English football's field of security contestations, to be fully captured by scholars, should be approached in relation to both its offline and online manifestations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Of gods and girls : the teen superheroine in British and American girls' comics from 1940-1984
- Author
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Hicks, Olivia, Murray, Christopher, Berridge, Susan, and Lindner, Katarina
- Subjects
741.5 ,superheroines ,comics ,british comics ,american comics ,superhero ,whiteness ,queerness ,stardom ,film ,twentieth century ,teen studies ,teenager ,supercats ,dc thomson ,supergirl ,mary marvel ,miss america ,starr of wonderland ,the avengers ,cat girl ,the cat bunty ,bunty ,valda ,the truth about wilson ,creative practice ,zines - Abstract
This thesis is a comparative study of the teenaged superheroine (the super-girl) across two comics cultures: the United States of America (US) and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (UK/Britain). It considers comics from 1940 to 1984, and its focus are those super-girls who appeared in girls’ comics, or comics which clearly catered towards a young female demographic. Rather than providing a chronological overview of the various characters, this thesis focuses on key characters who act as case studies. From America, Mary Marvel, Miss America, Tomboy and Supergirl, and from the UK, The Silent Three, Starr of Wonderland, the Cat, Valda and the Supercats. The aim of this thesis is to provide a theory of the super-girl that positions her within a framework of whiteness, imperialism and gender. The thesis argues that the super-girl occupies and embodies a fluid space that allows her to move between gendered identities and move beyond the restrictive gendered norms that made up much of the world of twentieth century teenage girls. Using the work of Michelle J. Smith on New Imperialism and teenage girls in fiction, this thesis argues that the active role of the super-girl is in service to white patriarchal imperialism, and to further the goals of her nation. Her transitional age here is key; because she is not yet a fully grown woman who must take on a more passive and nurturing role, the super-girl is given temporary leave to escape the world of the home and carry out her patriotic task. The whiteness of the teenage girl adds to her privileged status and adds to how the texts fashion her as an ideal for her audience, often using the language of stardom and celebrity, thus creating a specifically (and less threatening to patriarchal power structures) feminine form of the superhero. Finally, the super-girl’s body, which fluidly moves between passive and active forms, is considered a queer space. The super-girl thus is a construction of whiteness, imperialism, stardom, gender, liminal age and queerness, but she is also an unstable construction, and at times threatens patriarchal structures even as she attempts to uphold them. This thesis explores this unstable construction through a series of close readings of the comics and their accompanying paratexts, grounded in identity theory, historical context and a transnational comparative approach. Throughout this thesis I have responded to the texts and my evolving theories through the comics form, and provide a close reading of these creative responses in conjunction with the academic research. By comparing the UK and US comics cultures, this thesis challenges the American-centric nature of superhero scholarship and provides a richer reading of the genre. Another original contribution to scholarship in this thesis is the research’s engagement with the age specificity of super-girls. In addition to this, the thesis presents sustained scholarly critique of characters who have often been on the fringes of academia, such as Supergirl, Mary Marvel, Tomboy, Miss America, Supercats, Valda and the Silent Three, and is the first academic work on Starr of Wonderland.
- Published
- 2021
50. A Zinester's Guide to Creativity.
- Author
-
Newton, Megan
- Subjects
- *
ZINES , *LITTLE magazines , *CREATIVE ability , *CLASSROOM activities , *ACTIVITY programs in education - Abstract
The article focuses on "A Zinester's Guide to Creativity," exploring the concept of zines as independent publications for creative expression. Topics include the history and appeal of zines, classroom applications of zine-making across different grade levels, and practical considerations such as materials, themes, collaboration, and display options.
- Published
- 2024
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