Stray thoughts - I’ve worked in an art school library for three and a half years and have seen a lot of librarians obsessed with zines come and go. They are always trying to put on zine-making workshops, but they typically end up more like kindergarten glitter and sticker paper decoration hour, with any radical edges the zine might have sanded off. I guess I’m more interested in the zine inasmuch as it’s an object born of something like necessity, when a desire to communicate something in print is so strong that is eschews traditional tools and publication networks. Or, something sparked by an excess of ideas and content confronting a lack of professional tools traditional institutional support. And it rides these contradictions of immediacy and mediation (often quick and intuitive in tone but still with the publication framing), and impermanence/permanence (longer lasting than a verbal utterance but not really designed to last). I still see pretty great zines being made by artists and thinkers who would never be supported through traditional avenues, but maybe some other forms are ripe to hold these contradictions as well.

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