This special issue of ZINES proposes to gather works
of several researchers and zine-makers that analyse and produce zines that
focus on gender and sexual dissidence around the world. In the last decades, we
have witnessed the increase of the number of zines with the representation of
the feminist and queer issues in a range of different countries, just like
studies that have been aware of that (Harris, 2004; Kearney, 2006; Licona,
2012; Piepmeier, 2009; Poletti, 2008). Focus on these zines and publications in
a special issue of this journal, will give us a better understanding of this
phenomenon and the different state of the art among the five continents. We
want to pay special attention to emerging scenes and populations oppressed by
the colonial, patriarchal, and capitalist system. The importance of looking at
not hegemonic spaces and bodies bring to the zines their original spirit as
holders of counter- narratives.
Although the production of fanzines precedes the
emergence of punk, the truth is that it was with it that fanzines became
relevant as spaces for freedom of thought and creation, as well as an
alternative to conventional media. Since the 1970s, the universe of fanzines
has expanded not only thematically and stylistically, but also has extended its
territorial coverage and the communication media used in its production and
dissemination have expanded. In this special issue, we propose an approach that
aims to look at fanzines as 'communities' founded around a cultural object, in
the production of texts, photos and other materials about feminist and queer
scenes around the world – linked or not linked to punk. Fanzines are understood
here as an alternative medium of late modernity, capable of revealing the DIY
ethos associated with it.
Fanzines are material forms of symbolic
representation. They are objects constructed voluntarily that allow individuals
who participate in the process (of editing and distribution) to affirm their
social existence, to integrate (sub)cultures, musical/artistic scenes or
tribes, social movements, and to culturally participate in them;
simultaneously, fanzines materialized in a local movement markedly youthful,
stimulating an underground scene, and facilitating the dissemination of an
anti-hegemonic culture of usually hidden stories. They are a fundamental
element in the realization of tastes, affinities, social, political,
ideological, and cultural memberships, lifestyles and musical styles.
Feminist and queer fanzines have contributed to
‘oppositional technologies’, that is, the use of DIY techniques, which the riot
grrrl movement used plenty, from music production, zines, jewelry, clothes,
etc. They have allowed the contestation of the dominant representations of
women, which, in turn, has allowed them, in addition to the construction of new
concepts of femininity, to also explore issues of sexuality, gender, identity,
race, sexual orientation and class, especially through manifestos, visual
representations, drawings and photographs.
The importance of using fanzines as intervention
tools, and their consequent relevance for young generations, does not primarily
reside in their impact for potential social change, but in the ability to
construct these narratives in subcultural spaces, which might not only be
important for the participants in terms of providing a means of
self-representation, but more importantly, as a means to pedagogically work on
their ability to teach and learn about differences. In this sense, we can
assert that today’s feminist and queer zines not only are a collective media,
in which their authors construct identities, communities, and narratives that
shape their cultural moments, but are also instruments of feminist and gender
education, transnational networking and pillars of the political and underground
movement. A review of the escalation of the distribution of these zines in
recent times, and the fundamental role that the internet has played, over and
above the analogical zines and e-zine dichotomy, will provide us a closer view
of the state of the art.
We welcome proposals by academics, students and
independent researchers from any discipline or scholarly field, as well as by
zine librarians, and non-academic zinesters who want to share their personal
experiences or react to published papers. As ZINES Journal, this Special Issue
Embodied DIY: Feminist and Queer Zines in a Transglobal World, also encourages
papers submitted in unconventional format (e.g. collages, paste-up or other
innovative editing, zines, photo essays, etc.).
Proposals might address, but need not be limited to,
the following subjects:
- The role of subaltern identities in zines of underground urban cultures and their contribute as forms of anti-austerity and anti-neo-liberalism resistance and resilience.
- Challenging (and reconstruction of) the representations of female, male and non-binary identities in zines around the world.
- Transnational networking of feminist and queer movements through zines and the sedimentation of organic dynamics of active citizenship.
- Expression of the DIY culture made by non-binary, female or LGTBQ authors (podcasts, e-zines, tumblr, etc.).
- Zines as a platform for the distribution of different narratives of the Global South and LGTBQ+ diasporas.
- Feminist and queer zines as a space of resistance against the patriarchal, colonialist and capitalist system.
- Zines as political, cultural and artistic agents in marginal spaces made by feminist or queer authors.
- Representations of non-normative corporeality in zines.
- Visibility of anti-hegemonic artistic practices by feminist and queer zines in a transglobal world.
- Zines as objects and means of expressing cultural scenes, social movements and spheres of contestation in the North and the Global South.
- Zines as objects and means of alternative, libertarian, controversial and critical pedagogies.
- Reviews of zines or books which approach the topics listed above.
- In-depth interviews with zinesters of feminist and queer zines.
Publishing in ZINES is totally free of charge, except
full colour printing if requested by authors.
Published papers are copyleft and remain the property
of authors.
Deadline for abstract proposal: 15 October 2020
Notification of acceptance: 1st November 2020
Deadline for full paper submission: 15 January 2021
Deadline for revised paper submission: 1st May 2021
Publication date of ZINES vol.2-1: July 2021
email: zinesjournal@gmail.com
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