Girl Zines: Making Media, Doing Feminism

Front Cover
NYU Press, Nov 18, 2009 - Social Science - 249 pages

With names like The East Village Inky, Mend My Dress, Dear Stepdad, and I'm So Fucking Beautiful, zines created by girls and women over the past two decades make feminism's third wave visible. These messy, photocopied do-it-yourself documents cover every imaginable subject matter and are loaded with handwriting, collage art, stickers, and glitter. Though they all reflect the personal style of the creators, they are also sites for constructing narratives, identities, and communities.

Girl Zines is the first book-length exploration of this exciting movement. Alison Piepmeier argues that these quirky, personalized booklets are tangible examples of the ways that girls and women 'do' feminism today. The idiosyncratic, surprising, and savvy arguments and issues showcased in the forty-six images reproduced in the book provide a complex window into feminism's future, where zinesters persistently and stubbornly carve out new spaces for what it means to be a revolutionary and a girl. Girl Zines takes zines seriously, asking what they can tell us about the inner lives of girls and women over the last twenty years.

 

Contents

If I Didnt Write These Things No One Else
23
Materiality and the
57
Playing DressUp Playing PinUp
87
Intersectional
123
Where to Find Zines
201
Index
241
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2009)

Alison Piepmeier directs the Women's and Gender Studies Program at the College of Charleston, where she is Associate Professor of English. She is the co-editor of Catching a Wave: Reclaiming Feminism for the 21st Century and author of Out in Public: Configurations of Women's Bodies in Nineteenth-Century America.

Bibliographic information