For important, recent critiques of trans health-care provision by gender identity clinics GICs in the UK, from sociological and political perspectives, see Pearce and Gleeson and Hoad Since the coronavirus pandemic, the Trans Health UK website has been publishing the waiting times of GICs online, which at the time of writing vary from twelve to forty-six months.
For a partial history of zine culture with a North American queer and trans people of color focus, see Daniel C. Brouwer and Adela C. Licona 74— For an account of Girly, see Murphy The s also saw the appearance of numerous trans zines such as Masculine Femi- ninities.
Action for Trans Health is a grassroots organization working toward democratic trans health care and trans liberation. Initially based in Manchester and Northwest England, the organization developed into a network of local groups and activists across England and Scotland. At the time of writing, many of the chapters are not active—a few key resources and solidarity funds remain available, and many people who were active in the organization are involved in local mutual aid and prison abolition groups.
For instance, Jules Gleeson and J. Karine Espineira and Sam Bourcier provide an account of the genealogies of transfeminism in France and Spain and deployments of postporn as transfeminist praxis. It is also the case that some of the contributors to these zines are also journalists, whose writing appears in both establishment and independent media outlets—such as that of Travis Alabanza, Kuchenga Shenje, Wail Qasim, and others.
You do not own our bodies, you cannot control our lives, and you will not prevent our needs being met. Trans activists and academics have also translated the manifesto into French and Italian. Healing is of course not the same as a cure, a complex of promises and practices rooted in ableist ideas, as importantly and poetically elaborated by Eli Clare References Bernard, Jay.
London: Dysphoria Collective. Bourcier, Sam. Queer Zones: la trilogie. Brouwer, Daniel C. Clare, Eli. Brilliant Imperfection: Grappling with Cure. Cohn, Amy. Dysphoria Collective. Drift, Mijke van der. Leith, UK: Socio.
What are the costs of these customary forms for desiring presence and perfectible knowledge? Such an alteration in our emphases disputes the principles that inclusion, intelligibility, inti- macy, and sympathetic identiication are necessary social goods.
Instead, we might allow their denial to tell us something about what the minor object refuses: when established as a predictable condition or generic principle to borrow from Chow, when X is radically different or X resists , the minor object loses its speciicity to instead be appropriated into an existing unity. What does this leave us? This essay has tried to say some things about minor objects: that they might be nonnormative and even threatening without having a uniied or prescriptive politics, that their integration into institutional forms of his- tory and archive as negative deinition describes a form of capture, and that we do not have to discipline objects or signs to perceive what is being lost in conventional fantasies of progress or perfectibility.
Punk long ago disappointed my teenaged hopes for an obviously revolutionary politic, being a placeholder for institutionally improper craving but also immersed in the errors of all manner of dumbfuckery. But in its doing so, I learned something else: not to believe in those forms of political life — such as consensus, clarity, or closeness — as obligatory measures or commands for fashioning politics or life otherwise.
Nobody gets me might actually bleed into an onto-epistemological critique of usable knowledge about minor objects, unsettling the question of how to be political without a necessary orientation toward expertise, eficiency, or ends. How, then, do we make disturbance present and perceptible, without requir- ing clarity or coherence from our statements, or transformation or consensus in our actions, as measures for calculation and appraisal?
Under what circumstances might queer attachments, epistemic absences, and deliberate obscurities, or the thorny passage into an archive including no doubt some of the gestures I make here , be marshaled within the order of a continuous history, through a complicity between critical articulation and political utility?
Can we yet be destroyers of the status quo? What would it mean for a politics of knowledge and as yet obscure possibility to say to each other, from one minor threat to another, You are perfect. Osa Atoe, Maximum Rocknroll self-published , no. The collection is Stephen Duncombe and Maxwell Tremblay, eds.
I made my irst zine in as a junior in high school. The zines and other punk writings that are most archived and discussed were produced between and The passages citing Barbara Christian are particularly relevant ibid. These dangers are familiar to me, having considered the refugee as a supplemental igure of liberal empire. This list of characters includes the names of a number of punk bands and songs featuring women and people of color. Osa Atoe, Maximum Rocknroll, no. Laura U.
My apologies to archivists and librarians who might wish for more precision here. Sarah Harasym New York: Routledge, , — Ferguson, Reorder of Things, As an exception to the narrative construction of race as a crisis, the Barnard College Zine Library actively builds its collection around race as a primary story, soliciting donations and making purchases of zines by queers and women of color trans-inclusive.
Of course, that some perceive no absence at all is another sort of problem. As Sianne Ngai notes, to do so lays the burden on the racialized subject to produce a commensurable, measured response to racism. Foucault, Archeology of Knowledge, This is especially good to think about in an era in which it has become a widely accepted radical principle to want to have and make available all information at all times. This refusal is also often dismissed as anti-intellectual.
However, some punks observe that academic study of punk lacks rigorous review, because its historians and theorists are largely unafiliated with the academy. Ngai, Ugly Feelings, However, the content of science fiction zines is very different, consisting mostly of non-fiction and discussion about a variety of fannish topics, whereas media fanzines include, or consist solely of, fanfiction, art, poetry, as well as discussion, usually about television shows, films, and books.
Topic: fanzine. A list of 12 alternatives to calling the police, premised on the idea that "strong communities make police obsolete". Topics: zine, zines, police, poster, posters. Topics: podcast, milwaukee, zine, wisconsin, milwaukee lit supply, mls, anarchy, marxism, leninism, iso, Issues were subtitled "The World's Greatest Neurozine".
Along with Mondo , Boing Boing was an influence in the development of the cyberpunk subculture. It reached a maximum circulation of 17, copies. The last issue of the zine was Shadis was conceived and started by Jolly Blackburn as an independent gaming fanzine in A year later, in late , the magazine received its biggest success by including a random Magic: The Gathering card in each issue at a time when booster packs of the new card game were scarce; many players bought multiple copies of As the world crumbles at an increasing pace, anarchists seem to be struggling to engage on this terrain, often succumbing to either a kind of self-isolating defeatist position or a vague populist position, neither of which are spreading anarchist practices.
The zine tries to dissect the reasons Topics: zine, zines, anarchism, anarchist. The zines range from and ends around with a few yearly editions as the internet took over the place for paper. This is a nice slice of Star Trek fan history of the second wave of fans with the introduction of TNG. Skate Rags and 'Zines of the 's www.
An illustrated, narrative minizine. Cover Art by Nina; the rest by Noah Stijl. Topics: zine, stijl, new orleans, new new orleans, fiction, short story, diy, writing, noah stijl. Topics: fanzine, zine, draw, art, dibujo, war, guerrilla, arte, daniluk, carlos, mirighela, argentina, This zine is a reprint of an article that originally appeared in the anarchist magazine "Rolling Thunder" and that was subsequently republished in the anthology "Taking Sides: Revolutionary Solidarity and the Poverty of Liberalism.
It is a very important piece and one that should be read and Topics: zine, zines, ally politics. This is a mini-zine that functions as a pocket-sized guide to protesting. It provides basic information in an easy-to-distribute zine, covering topics such as what to bring clothing, food, water, etc , what not to bring drugs, alcohol, piercings, etc , what you will encounter at a larger protest i. There is also a list of websites for more detailed information on the topics covered.
Topics: anarchism, protest, protesting, protests. Scanned fanzines from the classing BBC sci-fi show Blakes 7. Topics: blakes 7, blake's 7, fanzines, fandom history.
Download that, and you've got everything in Issue One. Or, if you'd prefer, use the HTTP link to see each article by name, or hover over each pdf link or something. Work it out yourself] Download a. Find the first disc of the Sordid Zine Issue 1 compilation here , and the second disc here. At the time of This is the 3rd edition Fall of the Homes Not Jails squatting zine.
While the guide comes from a group based in San Francisco, many of the tips would be helpful for anyone squatting regardless of their location. Some of the San Francisco specific references will need to be overlooked for your local context, but most municipalities have Topics: zine, zines, squatting, squatter, homes not jails.
Archive of — Toronto queer punk zine or queer-punk zine J. An epistle from the desk of Rt. Pastor Manul Laphroaig, August 5, Tom Hunter says:. April 22, at pm. July 31, at am. Leave a Reply Name required Email required Message.
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