
Zines matter to those of us who want to learn more about punk and to take seriously what we can learn by studying punk culture.
What can zines bring to cultural studies that other mediums cannot, and what can we find in their physical manifestations that may be missing from the theory of subculture that we usually discuss? How is this related to their intimate and tangible nature?
When studying a particular subculture, there tends to be a focus on overarching themes and the governing ideas behind the movement. This focus often draws attention to the collective body. For example, the history of activism is often taught largely through the “big” events, generally embodied by large protests or events. Perhaps zines are capable of bringing to cultural and historical studies the individual perspective. Given their tendency towards DIY practices, zines carry a lot more of the individual in their presentation. Individuals create and sustain zines and offer a rare glimpse into individual desires and individual ways of interacting with other members of a subculture. So perhaps what zines bring to our study that other materials may not is the documentation of individual activities within subcultural communities.
When considered for the study of human activity, zines can provide insight into what those who subscribe to a subculture wish to portray, rather than what may be portrayed for them by scholars. Kathryn Degraff claims, “If we don’t preserve zines, historians and other researchers are going to have to write about our era solely from secondary sources.” Zines, then, can be viewed as a “purer” source for the study of subcultures, as opposed to any secondary academic sources that have been filtered through the perspective of another who may or may not be a participant and whose participatory history may or may not be acknowledged as one possible history rather than the representative history.
In subcultures, it can be difficult to pinpoint the individual, more casual side of movements. Perhaps zines are a way of accessing precisely this side of subculture. Miletic-Vejzovic points out that “Zine comics can tell us a lot about slang and language in our society, so they are as valuable a special collection as anything a library can collect.” The ability to access such language makes zines integral to the study of human history, and to anyone who wishes to study the nuances of language. The sphere that they occupy proves useful in academic research – whether cultural, linguistic, or literary – as physical realizations of cultural theories and movements that are lived by individuals in different and unpredictable ways. Zines can provide an essential dimension to students and academics for research, especially those interested in seeing an archive for what it is rather than just confirming what others have already said about it.
“Zines instigate intimate, affectionate connections between their creators and readers, not just communities but embodied communities that are made possible by the materiality of the zine medium”
Alison Piepmeier
The significance of zines lies, in part, in their material nature. Where subculture often exists in the background, as a set of governing life ideals, zines put into practice what a subculture declares and assumes. This physical representation of subculture, often realized through artistic expression, has a greater power to connect those in subcultural communities and to inspire those who initially lie outside the zine community. Piepmeier opens up the world of zines to students consistently and claims that “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” (214). This contention opens up the world of zines to possible durability against the increasing digitization of media that can lead to the attenuation of human connections. Where print books are becoming less prominent, and face-to-face interaction less constant, zines provide a space for people to live an embodied existence in the presence of others. I wonder, does this sense of community set zines apart from other print media, media in which people often become individually absorbed rather than collectively absorbed? How does the intimate community offered by a zine differ from the much larger notion of a public community sustained by newspapers, for example?
The inspirational characteristic of zines should not be overlooked. Zines are dense pamphlets that spark collective action and reaction. They can be artistic expressions of politics that inspire others to be active and inspire them to change their values. The imprint of zines cannot be ignored given this capacity. When studying movements, and the history of human interaction, we must also look to the ways in which subcultures come together to create community, and how they sustain that community. Zines are an integral part of such investigation, as they exist as “pure” unmediated representations of subcultural practice.
By Francesca Gimson
Being a hardcore fan made it ok to not be girly and to not be interested in romantic and sappy pop songs and I still get a buzz when I listen to my old records and the words of the songs still resonate.
Sarah Attfield