Zines!
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Venus Envy by Patty Winter
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Zines are non-commercial, small circulation “Do It Yourself” (DIY) magazines. They
provide the public
with a space for open discussion on issues of importance to our democracy. UCF students
in Theory and Criticism in the Visual Arts and Aesthetics have engaged in making zines
about a topic of interest to them. In doing so, they become zinsters, engaged in the
act of developing and inexpensively distributing ideas and social critiques through
images and text. These publications can be chaotic, disturbing, uncomfortable, sensual,
complex, loud, and confrontational.
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The Little Joker by Sara Sartor
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Historians trace the origination of the
word to the science fiction fanzines that arose in the 1930s, when the Science Correspondence
Club founded an amateur publication in which people could publish stories and respond to
science fiction. During the 1960s and 1970s the popular and mass culture orientation of zines
merged with the political orientation of pamphlets. At that time zines were largely focused
on social revolution and the Vietnam War. Due, in part, to the convenience and availability of
quick copy technologies, zines are flourishing today, expanding in content to include feminist
perspectives through the impetus of groups like the riot grrrls and cyberpunk. Besides being
passed out in hard copies, zines are also distributed on the WWW and on CD-ROMs.
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Art in the Age of AIDS by Jennifer Collier
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Zines are written and
illustrated through pastiche, parody, irony, and bricolage. Fragmentation and discontinuity
are the norm. Narratives and authorship can be ambiguous, simultaneous, self-conscious,
and/or anonymous. Reflecting the world we now live in, UCF zinsters have explored disjointed
narrative, complicated ways of seeing the world, and issues of ownership. Making zines allows
students to participate in contemporary debates while they clarify their own visions.
Kristin Congdon
Professor of Art and Philosophy
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Censorship by Tiffany Beasi
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Faces of Despair by Laura Guttridge
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Last Updated:
10-Aug-09