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	<title>the paper trail interview series</title>
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	<description>interviews with zinesters</description>
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		<title>the paper trail interview series</title>
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		<title>interview with max krafft</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/26/interview-with-max-krafft/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 26 May 2010 18:53:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? I&#8217;d been cooking and baking a lot since high school (where I had a few zinester friends), especially after I left for college and became vegan. One of my friends liked my &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/26/interview-with-max-krafft/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=130&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_131" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 225px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/max.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-131" title="max" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/max.jpg?w=215&#038;h=261" alt="" width="215" height="261" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">max writes &quot;i was a teenage vegan cookbook&quot; zine &amp; seems to move a lot. (interview originally posted january 8, 2008.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
I&#8217;d  been cooking and baking a lot since high school (where I had a few  zinester friends), especially after I left for college and became vegan.  One of my friends liked my dessert recipes so much that s/he told me  &#8220;you should write a cookbook&#8221;, so I did.</p>
<p><strong>why do you  continue making paper zines in the age of the internet? how do you think  the internet has affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
I really  enjoy the act of physically creating my zines and computer-based design  is nowhere near as satisfying to me as paper and pen. While the  internet is useful for sharing information, there is something charming  about the zine as an art object/artifact, something personal that most  websites and blogs lack. Also, for cookbooks in particular I like to  have something that can be set down beside the mixing bowl for easy  reference, that can get dirty and dog-eared, and that can be flipped  through casually before dinnertime. Finally, not everyone has or wants a  computer or internet access, and insofar as zines carry the connotation  of independent and anti-establishment works they have to be able to  exist outside of such an increasingly commercial medium.</p>
<p>The  internet does provide an easy alternative for people who aren&#8217;t  necessarily committed to the physical layout, printing, and distribution  process, and can be used to supplement and distribute paper zines. To  that end I periodically update my own cookblog (<a id="link_10" href="http://www.iwasateenagevegancookbook.blog.com/">www.iwasateenagevegancook.blog.com</a>),  where I add/illustrate/extrapolate recipes and provide a paperless  download option for my printed work.</p>
<p><strong>what is your  writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
I usually carry around a  little notebook to record ideas as they come to me, which, in the case  of my cookzines, could be anything from potential flavor combinations or  recipes, cookbook themes and titles, pithy anecdotes, other peoples&#8217;  comments on my work, or graphic design ideas, as well as the ingredients  and results of my cooking/baking experiments. Once I feel like I have a  good amount of workable recipes and a coherent theme I&#8217;ll start doing  the actual design, first by settling on a graphical style, then  sketching a rough draft of the cover and a storyboard-style layout of  the interior pages. After I&#8217;ve finalized the recipes and accompanying  text I fold a bunch of paper into facing pages, plot out all of the  margins and guidelines, lightly pencil in the text and illustrations,  then ink everything in. Finally, I scan the whole thing and make any  final edits or corrections in photoshop, save the pages as .pdf files,  and print them out.</p>
<p><strong>how do you think the zine community or  the process of making zines has changed since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
I  don&#8217;t know too much about the zine community, being something of a  curmudgeonly hermit myself, but just based on the audience that my own  work has found I&#8217;d say that it has gotten larger recently thanks to the  internet, if not necessarily more mainstream. As for the zine-making  process, I think people are using computer technology more frequently as  it has become more readily available, especially in combination with  older-school layout and design methods like screen-printing,  hand-drawing, photo-copying, and type-writering.</p>
<p><strong>are you  &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life as a zinester? how do you explain it to  people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
I don&#8217;t go out of my way to keep  my zines a secret, though I usually only mention them to people if I  think they&#8217;ll be interested. Most people can understand the idea of  cookbooks all right, so I&#8217;ll sometimes just leave it at that and let  them figure out the whole anti-capitalist/queer/post-modern comic  book/cultural commentary angle themselves.</p>
<p><strong>what do you  like best about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
I  like that the zine world still exists as an independent/underground  scene. Reading zines is a good way to find out what some other possibly  like-minded people in the world are doing and thinking about, and the  level of artistry some people bring to their work can be inspiring, too.  I dislike that zinesters can be overly self-involved sometimes, but  that&#8217;s true of people in general, so whatever.</p>
<p><strong>do zines  play a political role in your life? are you involved in other d.i.y.  projects? do they play a political role?</strong><br />
Zines are definitely  political for me; veganism is a polarizing subject in its own right,  and I&#8217;m not above slipping subversive non sequiturs into the margins of  my recipes as well. The most political aspect of my work, though, is  probably just that I&#8217;m trying to create and share something outside of  the larger capitalist marketplace, thereby taking a personal stand  against commodification. I would say that my occasional work as an  independent musician and writer is political in the same way.</p>
<p><strong>what  advice might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
The  community is as important as you make it, and you shouldn&#8217;t be turned  off from making zines out of concern that you might not be hip enough to  hang with all of us cool kids. The work itself is the important thing,  so write in isolation if you have to, then share it with as much or as  little of the world as you want. Read some other peoples&#8217; work while  you&#8217;re at it and that&#8217;s your zine community right there.</p>
<p><strong>what  role do you think distros can/should play in the zine community?</strong><br />
Distros  should make it easier for people writing zines to share their work,  expanding their potential audience and allowing authors to see what  others are writing about. They also can serve as filters, as the people  running them can decide which zines to carry in their inventory based on  quality or content considerations. I think the best distros are the  ones that have personality and politics of their own.</p>
<p><strong>are  there changes you&#8217;d like to see in the zine community or your own zine  creation?</strong><br />
My own work has become increasingly illustrated, to  the point where it is almost as much a graphic novel as a cookbook. If  and when I make another volume I&#8217;d like to see how much further the  boundary between the two can be blurred while still producing something  useful and entertaining. I should probably learn how to draw.</p>
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			<media:title type="html">ciaraxyerra</media:title>
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			<media:title type="html">max</media:title>
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		<item>
		<title>interview with julian</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/24/interview-with-julian/</link>
		<comments>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/24/interview-with-julian/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 24 May 2010 17:54:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/?p=127</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? Basically, through punk. I grew up in a tiny town on Vancouver Island that had a surprisingly active DIY punk/hardcore scene when I was a teenager. Despite the town being isolated and &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/24/interview-with-julian/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=127&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_128" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 237px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/julian.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-128" title="julian" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/julian.jpg?w=227&#038;h=219" alt="" width="227" height="219" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">julian writes the zine &quot;one way ticket&quot;. (interview originally posted february 18, 2008.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
Basically,  through punk. I grew up in a tiny town on Vancouver Island that had a  surprisingly active DIY punk/hardcore scene when I was a teenager.  Despite the town being isolated and unknown, there was a sincere bunch  of kids who created a tight-knit and heartfelt community of sorts. At  all of the first shows I went to, there were scrappy personal zines  being handed out or sitting on tables at the back. Some of the older  kids also had a zine distro stocked with stuff from all over, and after  buying a few zines from them I was hooked. As I got more involved in the  scene, and the older kids moved away, I started a record and zine  distro with a friend. My mailbox became a tenuous connection to the  punk/zine underworld even before I had made my own zine.</p>
<p>The  local scene had a definite urgency and rawness to it. Beyond that,  everyone seemed to just be doing whatever they wanted to do without  asking permission—starting a band, making a zine, booking a show. And  that influenced me profoundly and was something I wanted to revolve my  life around. During those early years, there were dozens of personal  mixed with political zines being made locally, and I was blown away by  the honesty and emotion of it all, even if now I would look back on a  lot of it as angsty ranting. So I feel like the desire to write a zine  came out of this context, to contribute to something going on around me  and to tell my own story like all the ones I had read.</p>
<p>It took  a while for me to actually put something out. After many embarrassing  attempts I’m glad I never reproduced, eventually me and two friends  challenged each other to make zines before a show in the summer after I  graduated highschool. That was &#8220;One Way Ticket&#8221; #1, almost six years  ago. In the months after that, I got a lot of encouragement both from  the punks at the giant collective house I moved into and from some  reviews. There were some orders and some letters and after that I was  hooked.</p>
<p><strong>why do you continue making paper zines in the age  of the internet? how do you think the internet has affected the world of  paper zines?</strong><br />
I wasn’t doing the zine before the internet was  around, so I’m not sure how well I can gauge the changes. I don’t think  the internet has or will change people’s desire to read things that  aren’t on screens. I hate reading stuff on a computer even though I’m a  total nerd. When I put out a zine there is an immense sense of tactile  reality to it: folding, sorting, stapling, holding. Turning the pages.  Handing it to someone. Carrying it in my pocket. Stuffing envelopes. I  think that this visceral quality changes the way you feel when you read  the text, and that’s why I put out print zines. It can enable a more  intimate connection between reader and writer. At least, that’s how I  feel like when I read a really good zine. Recently, I was reading &#8220;Rice  Harvester&#8221; #13 on my loft bed by the light of my headlamp and I was  overcome by the intensity of his story. It felt like the most intense  thing I had ever read. Now, if I was reading someone’s blog or  something, I doubt it would have been the same.</p>
<p><strong>what is  your writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
Difficult. Frantic.  Exhausting. I don’t write all the time and even though writing is a  creative and exhilarating experience, it requires a lot of discipline  for me, forcing myself to get things done.</p>
<p>As far as process  goes, I usually have an idea or a few sentences that sort of congeal in  my brain and I work them over while I’m walking around, on the bus,  biking, watching bands. When a bunch of stuff builds up in there, it  becomes sort of unbearable and I decide to make another zine. Then I  work furiously to make some deadline I’ve set for myself, like a trip or  a zine fair, and never seem to have enough time. I write everything out  in by hand in notebooks or on scraps of paper, then type it up and  print it out and edit it. Editing for me involves scribbling all over  the print outs, cutting out tons, adding in entire new parts. I used to  spend a painstaking amount of time on cut and paste layout but I’ve  since become more interested in type setting and typography, and have  realized that sometimes good layout involves the details that you don’t  notice. I also got tired of people telling me my zine looked like &#8220;In  Abandon&#8221;, even though it did. For the last zine I used InDesign because  I’m addicted to ligatures, Photoshop to make fake half-tone photos, and  rub-on letters to do the headings. My natural handwriting is nearly  illegible if I don’t spend concerted effort on it, but if I have time  I’d like to handwrite parts of zines or whole zines in the future,  because handwritten zines have always impressed me. I still feel like  each issue is an experiment, and I don’t want to give that up.</p>
<p><strong>how  do you think the zine community or the process of making zines  haschanged since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
I’m sort of on the  outskirts of the zine community and haven’t been involved for that long.  It does seem like people don’t order zines based on reviews anymore,  but I’m sketchy and change addresses a lot, so that might just be my  personal experience. The zine community also seems like more of an  institution now: big annual zine fairs, established magazines,  monopolizing distros… but that trend is pretty old if you think about  it. It seems less people are making weird, explosive zines in one night  just for the fuck of it, and it’s too bad because I always really liked  those sorts of zines.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life  as a zinester? how do you explain it to people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
I  wouldn’t call myself a zinester but everyone in my life knows I write  zines. My mom helped proof read #3 and remains a thoughtful critic.  Recently we were talking about how after I graduate university this  summer she’ll be at a loss for what to tell my relatives since I’ve got  no career ambitions or solid life plans. I said, ‘Just tell them I’m a  writer,’ and we both laughed.</p>
<p><strong>what do you like best about  the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
Best: The friends and  penpals I’ve made, trading zines through the mail, the excitement of  having things pop up in my mailbox, having a reason for all-nighters  spent screen-printing and putting zines together, hanging out at kinkos,  being part of a murky and complicated secret world, having an  expressive outlet to keep me mentally stable, the fact that I can  probably meet and talk to all of the zine writers who’ve inspired me.</p>
<p>Least:  shit that’s expensive, zines that are boring, when we forget to live  our lives because we’re too busy writing about them, when  institutionalization and routine makes things devoid of passion and  excitement, zines as identity, any sort of emerging zine canon.</p>
<p><strong>do  zines play a political role in your life? are you involved in other  d.i.y. projects? do they play a political role?</strong><br />
The zine changes  the way I live, to a certain extent. It has changed the activity of my  daily life through personal connections, events, travels and such that  revolve around my zine or zines in general. To the extent that politics  is about altering our immediate experience of the way we live, then the  zine plays a “political role,” I suppose. But I write stories about my  life because I have difficulty with abstraction. Politics is a strange  beast, especially in so far as it involves the abstraction of our lives.  I’ve been an anarchist since high school, involved in fleeting ways  with a lot of different projects (Food Not Bombs, Books to Prisoners, an  anarchist reading group, a radical bookstore) and yet still approach  “political” projects with caution and difficulty. These days I read a  lot of philosophy. I find that I have more open and unanswerable  questions than solutions, answers or programs. I’m not an activist and  am not interested in most political “organizing,” but part of living my  life in a fulfilling and meaningful way often involves social and  community action of some sort, and that’s been reflected in my zine. I’m  trying to figure a lot of these things out right now, and am less sure  than ever about conclusions.</p>
<p><strong>what advice might you have for  someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
Just be honest and  give your zine to lots of people for feedback. Write lots of letters.  Remember that the content is important, so get out there and experience  the world intensely so you have something worth writing about. Don’t  think that it’s easy to write or make a good zine, but all that sweat,  heart and soul shows through. Show your seams, lay yourself bare, and  try not to get turned off by the exclusivity or snobbishness that we can  sometimes get carried away with. Remember margins (this took me five  years). Don’t believe or trust people who tell you it’s too hard to  steal photocopies these days.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think  distros can/should play in the zine community?</strong><br />
I’m really glad  there are big US distros because I could not afford to keep my zine  cheap and send it out to very many people in the US because of Canadian  postage rates. Canada Post is a fascist organization. I don’t like it  that a distro like Microcosm is so huge that at times it seems like the  de facto censor of the zine world, even though they’ve helped me out a  lot and been great people. And there are other distros and more stores  that sell zines now, so I’m unsure if my critique is fair. Distros are  good for setting up tables at shows and events to make zines accessible  without compromising our DIY ethics. I think there should be more  distros, and I’ve personally done two and know how much effort is  involved. I gave up on it but I’m glad others haven’t. I’m also partial  to thinking that it’s ok if distros come and go and serve more limited  purposes, and while establishment and longevity has its benefits, it  shouldn’t be our only goal.</p>
<p><strong>are there changes you&#8217;d like to  see in the zine community or your own zine creation?</strong><br />
I’ve always  felt sort of on the fringe of the ‘zine community,’ and my identity  isn’t bound up with my zine. There are things I like and things I don’t,  but overall it seems to be a constant source of surprise and  inspiration, if at times frustrating. What seems more interesting than  the general trends of the zine world is what you find when you look  below the surface. There are always a few misfits and maniacs just doing  zines that get me stoked despite the frustrations I might have with the  zine community as a whole.</p>
<p>My zine is constantly evolving.  I’m excited to be finally finishing university because it sapped a lot  of my writing energy and has forced me at times to lead a pretty boring  existence. I have some ideas for different types of zines and projects  in the future: an in-depth view of straightedge with interviews and  stories from different perspectives, a series of introductions to  contemporary philosophers in zine format, a guide to DIY karaoke, a west  coast bike/zine/mayhem tour… and whether any of these see the light of  day is another question… &#8220;One Way Ticket&#8221; #6 should be done before the  summer with stories from highschool that will hopefully make people  laugh.</p>
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			<media:title type="html">ciaraxyerra</media:title>
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		<title>interview with helen walden</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/19/interview-with-helen-walden/</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 19 May 2010 18:43:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? I&#8217;m not entirely sure where I first heard of zines. I know I was about 11 or 12 &#8211; I think it was either from an issue of my mom&#8217;s Utne Reader &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/19/interview-with-helen-walden/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=124&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_125" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 271px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/helen.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-125" title="helen" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/helen.jpg?w=261&#038;h=191" alt="" width="261" height="191" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">helen lives in portland, maine, where she listens to a lot of heavy metal &amp; writes the scathing political perzine &quot;doctrinal expletives&quot;.</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
I&#8217;m  not entirely sure where I first heard of zines. I know I was about 11 or  12 &#8211; I think it was either from an issue of my mom&#8217;s <em>Utne Reader</em> or from <em>Sassy</em>&#8216;s Zine of the Month. I made my first zine in fifth  grade and it was absolutely godawful, but it was a great way for a  bored adolescent girl in rural Maine to pass the time so I kept at it.  It also corresponded with my growing interest in punk rock &#8211; my zines  helped me meet folks who had interests similar to mine and could  commiserate with me about being mocked for weird clothes and hair.</p>
<p><strong>why  do you continue making paper zines in the age of the internet? how do  you think the internet has affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
I  like that paper zines are tangible &#8211; I like being able to curl up in bed  and read a zine. Maybe this is silly but it feels more intimate and  personal than reading a blog or something. I also don&#8217;t like reading  long or serious pieces of writing over the internet &#8211; I start getting a  headache after about three paragraphs.</p>
<p>I like that the  intertubes have made it easier to get zines &#8211; that&#8217;s important for kids  who are growing up in crappy small towns and don&#8217;t know anyone who does a  zine but still want to get their hands on one. It also gives people a  place to put crappy dashed-off writing, so they don&#8217;t kill any trees  expressing it. Then again, I have seen people whose zines consisted of  copy-and-pasted Livejournal entries so maybe that filter effect doesn&#8217;t  work for everyone.</p>
<p><strong>what is your writing/editing/layout  process like?</strong><br />
Usually when a particular issue has been on my mind  for a long time, I decide I have to write about it because otherwise  it&#8217;s going to bug me forever. And when I&#8217;ve been thinking about  something for a while, I usually have a handful of phrases and ideas in  my head about it and I just need to string them together in a coherent  manner &#8211; sometimes this is really easy, other times it&#8217;s insanely  difficult.</p>
<p>I either write it out by hand or on a computer.  Usually I only write by hand when I want to include drawings or I have a  pretty good idea of exactly how I want to phrase things &#8211; I prefer  writing on a computer because I edit a lot as I go along, which is a  real pain in the ass when handwriting.</p>
<p>My layout process is  pretty lazy, honestly. I use pictures from discarded library books for  page backgrounds and just cut up and rubber-cement my text and drawings  on there. I usually just take whatI can get from library book sales but I  prefer medical-type pictures or ones of dusty, crumbling ruins (I am so  metal).</p>
<p><strong>how do you think the zine community or the process  of making zines has changed since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
It&#8217;s  hard to say because I like reading zines but I don&#8217;t really keep up with  The Community (TM). I do know I have to defend zine-making a lot more  now, to people who are like &#8220;So why don&#8217;t you just have ablog?&#8221; Grumble  grumble.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life as a  zinester? how do you explain it to people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
I  don&#8217;t really talk about it that much &#8211; not because I&#8217;m trying to hide  it, but because it&#8217;s something I never think to mention for some reason.  So no, I&#8217;m not &#8220;out&#8221; to a lot of people, but that&#8217;s not really  intentional. Since most of the people I hang out with are punk kids,  they mostly know what zines are already, but on the occasions when I get  to explain zines to non-p-rock types I just say the usual: &#8220;It&#8217;s a  self-published low-budget magazine.&#8221;</p>
<p><strong>what do you like best  about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
My favorite thing  is pretty simple: I like getting feedback from folks about my writing,  either from friends or total strangers. The stuff I write about is all  stuff I like to discuss with other people,so it&#8217;s nice when I actually  get to do that.</p>
<p>My least favorite thing is the cliquishness  and the cult of personality that develops around &#8220;celebrity&#8221; zinesters  sometimes &#8211; usually this is because their work is good, but it&#8217;s still  annoying when folks are like &#8220;Oh, I got the new zine by THIS PERSON&#8221; and  seemingly care more about the author than the quality of the zine  itself. This is a pretty minor gripe, though.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play  a political role in your life? are you involved in other d.i.y.  projects? do they play a political role?</strong><br />
I write about politics a  lot in my zine, and I&#8217;ve used it as a way to get into political  discussions with people, so it does play a political role in that way.  I&#8217;m not involved in many other DIY projects at the moment, but that&#8217;s  mostly because school is devouring my life, and hopefully once I&#8217;m done  with that I&#8217;ll take on more projects.</p>
<p>I really like the  politics of DIY publishing &#8211; the idea that your shit doesn&#8217;t need to  look professional or whatever, it&#8217;s just important that you&#8217;re speaking  for yourself. I really want to remind kids of that whenever I see a  distro table that&#8217;s like 10 Crimethinc pamphlets and nothing by the kids  themselves &#8211; I don&#8217;t want to read another copy of &#8220;10 Reasons  Capitalists Want To Sell You Deodorant&#8221;, I want to hear what you have to  say! I named my zine after a song by Carcass that&#8217;sabout the dangers of  living your life through someone else&#8217;s words and letting other people  speak for you &#8211; don&#8217;t let that happen! Do more zines!</p>
<p><strong>what  advice might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
Read  a lot of zines. The zines I did got a lot better once I read other  people&#8217;s work and saw the cool stuff they were doing &#8211; I didn&#8217;t directly  imitate it but it opened my eyes to all the fun possibilities of the  zine medium.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think distros can/should play  in the zine community?</strong><br />
I like distros a lot. I move pretty  frequently and I can be bad with answering mail so they&#8217;re definitely a  good thing for me and other zinesters with the same sort of issues.  They&#8217;re also good for folks who are just getting into zines and want to  get a whole bunch of them at once &#8211; the first zines I ever got were  through someone&#8217;s distro and it was a good way to see a broad  cross-section of what was going on in the zine world at the time. Having  my zine distroed also allows it to go to places that I do not have time  or cash to travel to. So yeah, I think distros play an important and  useful role.</p>
<p><strong>are there changes you&#8217;d like to see in the  zine community or your own zine creation?</strong><br />
I wish I had a better  work ethic &#8211; my output tends to be pretty sporadic. Also, I wish more  people in general did zines &#8211; even when people do pretty terrible zines  they tend to get better over time. That&#8217;s about it.</p>
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			<media:title type="html">ciaraxyerra</media:title>
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		<title>interview with greg</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/17/interview-with-greg/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 17 May 2010 17:41:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/?p=121</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? In 11th grade, I persuaded my high school to let me make a school newspaper, even though i had absolutely no obvious journalistic experience other than being in a half-assed Alabama journalism &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/17/interview-with-greg/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=121&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_122" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 276px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/greg.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-122" title="greg" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/greg.jpg?w=266&#038;h=170" alt="" width="266" height="170" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">greg writes the long-running zine &quot;rice harvester&quot; &amp; has been in a whole slew of punk bands. i think right now he lives in the bay area. (interview originally posted march 22, 2008.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
In  11th grade, I persuaded my high school to let me make a school  newspaper, even though i had absolutely no obvious journalistic  experience other than being in a half-assed Alabama  journalism class.  Basically, I just wrote a zine ranting against the school. They gave me  money to print it, but I figured out my first copy scam and kept the  cash. They were stupid by not asking for receipts. Around the same time,  I was finding out about local zines around Alabama. They were, more or  less, just trash about garage rock and hating skinheads. The idea that I  could write whatever I wanted and people would read it was really  intriguing to me. So, I wrote less about my school and more about punk  and pinball. That became the first issue of &#8220;Rice Harvester&#8221;, which I  printed in the summer of 1995.</p>
<p><strong>why do you continue making  paper zines in the age of the internet? how do you think the internet  has affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
Honestly, I just really  like it a lot. I like having this physical thing to hand to people when  traveling around. I&#8217;ve tried writing things on the internet, butI don&#8217;t  get the same feeling from it. Also, I don&#8217;t think as much about what I&#8217;m  going to say when I&#8217;m typing on the internet. It&#8217;s gotten me in trouble  before. It&#8217;s just not healthy or constructive for me. Writing doesn&#8217;t  always have to be immediate. Also, I like the clutter that zines cause. I  love how junk, zines, cassettes, photos, art and clunky analog  equipment takes up space. I keep seeing the world moving in this  direction of creating smaller technology and having less clutter  and&#8230;.I just don&#8217;t like it. If I ever tried to lay out a zine on a  computer, it would be the hardest thing ever for me.</p>
<p><strong>what  is your writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
When I first started  writing &#8220;Rice Harvester&#8221;, I didn&#8217;t edit at all. I wrote everything out  on notebook paper, taped it onto punk fliers, scammed the copies and  gave it to my friends. They were terrible zines. At some point, I  realized my zines were making theirway out of Alabama (my home state)  and into the hands of people I didn&#8217;t know. So, I started paying more  attention to detail and editing. Now, I edit a lot more, but the layout  hasn&#8217;t changed too drastically. In my last issue, some of the originals  were written on paper that was yellowing and older than me because it&#8217;s  what was laying around in my room. I&#8217;ve tried making my handwriting as  legible as possible in the last few years&#8230;I keep in a lot of mistakes  though&#8230;nothing is perfect.</p>
<p><strong>how do you think the zine  community or the process of making zines has changed since you&#8217;ve been  involved?</strong><br />
I&#8217;ve been writing my zine for almost 13 years and I&#8217;ve  never felt like I&#8217;ve been a part of any sort of zine community, so I&#8217;m  not sure how to comment on that. Most of the zines that I like have  stayed consistently great, with the exception of one or two. It seems  like more people are making zines full of art now, which is fine, but  I&#8217;d rather read about how folks deal with existing in this fucked up  world that we inhabit. Maybe making art IS their way of dealing with it.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life as a zinester? how  do you explain it to people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
Since I&#8217;ve been  doing my zine for so long now, a lot of my friends and acquaintances  know about it. It&#8217;s not something that I really talk about too much.  It&#8217;s just something I do. I&#8217;ve never called myself a &#8220;zinester&#8221; or  referred to myself in that context, even though it&#8217;s a big part of my  life.</p>
<p>I don&#8217;t try and explain it to people who don&#8217;t understand.  A couple years ago, on tour, I was selling zines at a table at a show  in Birmingham. These sorta hipster-looking high school kids were  thumbing through an issue and looking confused. They asked what it was. I  tried to explain it to them, but they looked at me like I was a  nine-headed alien and stopped talking to me. Then, they made fun of me.</p>
<p><strong>what  do you like best about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
I  like how a lot of my favorite zines exist outside of corporate bounds  and mass advertising. I like that I can travel around the country and  give it to people for free or cheap. I like that I&#8217;ve given multiple  copies to traveling punks and they&#8217;ve told me later that they sold it  for beer or food. I love that people can use the medium to say whatever  they want and get it out to an audience. That&#8217;s only a few things.  There&#8217;s a lot of things I don&#8217;t like as well, but I&#8217;m not the most  optimistic person. I feel like some larger distros have an unspoken  monopoly over bookstores and infoshops that I find unsettling&#8230;.and  maybe some artists&#8217; work has been overused.</p>
<p>Ultimately, I think  my concerns are rather petty.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play a political  role in your life? are you involved in other d.i.y. projects? do they  play a political role?</strong><br />
&#8220;Political&#8221; is kind of a vague term to  me&#8230;and yes, they do. I&#8217;ll just leave it at that.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve gotten  more involved in screen printing over the last few years and I&#8217;ve been  trying to teach people how to do it well and cheaply. I just helped two  friends build a lot of screens. They made a lot of political posters  that questioned the ethics of different candidates in the upcoming  presidential election. Now, they&#8217;re wheatpasting them all over the  country. I used to go to large protests, but I&#8217;ve become disillusioned  with group tactics in the past few years. I also play in D.I.Y. punk  bands, which can be questionably political.</p>
<p><strong>what advice  might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
Strive  to have your own voice and do things in your own style. Wholeheartedly  embrace your mistakes and learn from them. Free photocopies exist  somewhere always.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think distros can/should  play in the zine community?</strong><br />
I just started using distros with  this past issue, so I&#8217;m not that familiar with them. I think the writer  should always retain as much control over their zine as possible.  Distros should get it out to people and stay as honest and reliable as  they can. The good distros should be commended for all the hard work  they do. Basically, don&#8217;t be a shithead.</p>
<p><strong>are there changes  you&#8217;d like to see in the zine community or your own zine creation?</strong><br />
Since  I don&#8217;t see myself as a part of a zine community, I don&#8217;t know of any  changes that<br />
need to take place. I know I run the risk of sounding  like a snob by saying that, but I&#8217;m just trying to be honest.As far as  my own zine goes, I&#8217;d like to explore more of the tangents in my head  that i usually suppress. In my last issue, I left out how I feel about  violence, prison issues and suicide because I thought some of it might  freak out people who know me. I wasn&#8217;t ready for those conversations,  but now I am&#8230;.I think.</p>
<p>If you&#8217;re a punk (like me) who has been  shot or stabbed, please write me. If you&#8217;re not, you should still write  to me. Thanks Ciara.<br />
write to:<br />
Greg p.o. box 3381<br />
Bloomington,  IN 47402</p>
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		<title>interview with emmalee conner</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/12/interview-with-emmalee-conner/</link>
		<comments>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/12/interview-with-emmalee-conner/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 May 2010 14:58:37 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/?p=118</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? When I was getting into punk I was really enamored by the whole riot grrrl movement. I researched as much as I could about it and found a lot in the library &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/12/interview-with-emmalee-conner/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=118&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_119" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 233px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/emmalee.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-119" title="emmalee" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/emmalee.jpg?w=223&#038;h=148" alt="" width="223" height="148" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">emmalee currently writes the zine &quot;toothworm,&quot; but has been making zines of various names for many years. she&#039;s also been in an array of punk bands, including rosa &amp; punkin&#039; pie. (interview originally posted october 22, 2007.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
When I  was getting into punk I was really enamored by the whole riot grrrl  movement. I  researched as much as I could about it and found a lot in  the library about zines. Thirteen year-old me sat in the main  library in downtown Houston TX reading <span style="text-decoration:underline;">Angry Women in Rock</span>&#8216;s  interview  with Kathleen Hanna, panting at the idea of crazy bitches  doing whatever the fuck they wanted on  stage and in paper. I guess it  was all downhill from there.</p>
<p><strong>why do you continue making paper  zines in the age of the internet? how do you think the internet has  affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
I guess I like the idea of  tangible things left behind. I&#8217;m a big hoarder and rooter of all things  bygone and forgotten. (Which explains moving across the country several  times with a  giant suitcase of nothing but paper&#8230; not even books or  zines&#8230; just paper). The Internet, although important in my life for  communication purposes, is way to abstract for me. I need hard proof of  lives lived. Blood and shit stains to prove it. The Internet definitely  seems to have made the &#8220;world of zines&#8221; much more accessible to more  people. That&#8217;s probably pretty positive.</p>
<p><strong>what is your  writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
Usually i take the  writing and drawings I&#8217;ve been working on for the duration of time I&#8217;ve  gone with out publication and slowly piece together a storyline (which  usually contains massive references to art, music, and literature I&#8217;ve  consumed in the duration of the creation of the final product: zine). It  usually takes me a few months to put it all together. Then i usually  spend a few days with the final touches, drinking too much of  mood-altering substances, obsessing, and reviewing it; then mad dashing  to office depot to make copies. This last issue of &#8220;toothworm&#8221; was  mostly layed out in a teal green tour van, hungover and deaf.</p>
<p><strong>how  do you think the zine community or the process of making zines has  changed since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
I&#8217;m not really sure. I  guess I&#8217;ve changed the way I&#8217;ve done a lot of stuff. I  think that there  are definite trends that have changed. When i first started reading  zines, it seemed like it was a really wonderfully confessional medium. A  way to vent feelings and secrets with out fear or harsh criticism.  These days it seems like the opposite traits are revered. Like it&#8217;s more  important to make snooty references to post-modern society or talk  about being a drunk fuck-up. And I know these things are valid too, but I  miss the days when it felt okay to reveal too much. And although there  seems to be a healthy anti-technology backlash I&#8217;d like to put my two  cents in: fuck photoshop.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your  life as a zinester? how do you explain it to people who don&#8217;t  understand?</strong><br />
I guess I&#8217;m occasionally &#8220;out&#8221;. I definitely  don&#8217;t pass my zine out to everyone. I distro it on tour and through  Paper Trail and send it to friends but, to be honest, I&#8217;m always a  little apprehensive of letting everyone know I write a zine. My dad has  all the zines i did as a teenager in a file somewhere, but ever since i  started &#8220;toothworm,&#8221; I&#8217;ve been too afraid to send him a copy because I  write a lot about him. I guess I don&#8217;t really explain it to people who  don&#8217;t understand.</p>
<p><strong>what do you like best about the zine  world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
I like the idea of people  documenting their own ideas and lives. I like the idea that you can be  as much of a writer/artist/social critic as you want under your own  control. I like the space zines/self-publishing puts between us and  them. I apprecitate narrative i can relate to. I guess just like every  grouping of people under a common interest is pretty similar. I don&#8217;t  like unproductive criticism and I&#8217;m not into things being well-received  or more popular because the person involved, regardless of the quality  of the work. Also just like most &#8220;scenes&#8221; it seems that white men are  always taken more seriously, even if all they write about is complaining  about women.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play a political role in your life?  are you involved in other d.i.y. projects? do they play a political  role?</strong><br />
I would say I apply doses of social constructs and the  political impacts that they make in my narrative. Usually the writers i  like best (Sontag and Didion for instance) do the same thing. I think  it&#8217;s really important to point out the way that power effects the way  people relate. I think there is a lot of resistance to that idea as  something that&#8217;s &#8220;played out&#8221; or &#8220;obvious&#8221; but i think that&#8217;s just away  to not confront the aspects of privilege we may see in ourselves. I  would say that there is an important ethic of &#8221; d.i.y.&#8221; in every project  I engage myself in and most of these fall under creative outlets and  have no larger social impact (bands, performance, art). But I would  contend they are still very &#8220;political&#8221; to me.</p>
<p><strong>what advice  might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
Read  a lot.  Be it other zines, the newspaper, books, short stories, poetry,  or autobiographies. The more I read/listen to music/watch informative  documentaries rented from the library, the more i see my own stories  form and mold more clearly. Don&#8217;t let yourself become too limited by  trends or taboos.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think distros can/should  play in the zine community?</strong><br />
Distros are awesome. When I go  on tour I bring a huge box of zines done by friends (or photocopied from  my own vaults of old zines/political pamphlets). People usually get  really excited about it. Plus it is so cool to roll into Minot ND with a  bunch of zines about sex work and trans-history and see people open up a  bunch. Mail order is the great lost art; I&#8217;m so into it.</p>
<p><strong>are  there changes you&#8217;d like to see in the zine community or your own zine  creation?</strong><br />
I&#8217;d like to see more people producing. I&#8217;d like to  see myself become more focused with my writing which tend to be a web of  my experiences tied together with quotes/themes from songs and books.  I&#8217;d like to see more zines that blend the classic &#8220;narrative&#8221; style with  the newly popular idea of &#8220;art zines&#8221;.</p>
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		<title>interview with eva louise</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/10/interview-with-eva-louise/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 10 May 2010 17:53:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved with zines/d.i.y. publishing? I don’t think I had ever read a zine when I made my first zine. I had a friend named eleanor whitney, (who was like, the hippest hip that ever hipped). she &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/10/interview-with-eva-louise/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=115&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_116" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 270px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/eva.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-116" title="eva" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/eva.jpg?w=260&#038;h=195" alt="" width="260" height="195" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">eva wrote the amazing zine &quot;what i saw from where i stood&quot;. she is a mama living in maine &amp; hopefully will write another zine again someday soon. (interview originally posted may 21, 2008.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved with zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
I don’t  think I had ever read a zine when I made my first zine. I had a friend  named eleanor whitney, (who was like, the hippest hip that ever hipped).  she started writing a zine called “indulgence” and I guess I thought,  “that’s awesome, I can do that.” My ass of a high school boyfriend said  something like, “you only want to write a zine because you want to be  like eleanor.” Which infuriated me internally, (probably because it was  true) and only made me want to write a zine more. My first zine was  called “maisonette.” it was all prose and goopy syrupy juvenile  bullshit. I had no politics, no beliefs and no struggle in my life. I  was not informed or experienced in any way. Maybe a zine by a very naïve  person could turn out inspiring and endearing, but “maisonette” was not  the one. If you have a copy: do me a favor and destroy it. (this seems  like it could be a common sentiment for people’s feeling about their  early zine-making efforts.)</p>
<p>I toyed with the idea of making  another zine for years, but didn’t know what to say. I knew that if I  made a zine again I wanted it to actually offer something tangible, to  speak about experiences that could impact people, to celebrate relevant  aspects of being an anarchist lady, and to do it with beautiful layout.</p>
<p><strong>why  do you continue making paper zines in the age of the internet? how do  you think the internet has affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
As  far as the internet goes, I might as well be a luddite. I didn’t know  zines had ever taken a computer double-life until a couple months ago. I  don’t know why but it breaks my heart. There’s just something about  paper. The smell of toner and the romance of ripping my hair out trying  to get my pages photocopied squarely are forgivable by the end result of  having a paper artifact. Zines are just like typewriters, rub-on  letters, hand sewing, ancient books from the library, mason jars, cast  iron skillets, patching your jeans instead of getting new ones, riding  your bike when you could drive. I love things that live without being  plugged in, that can be exchanged from hand to hand, and that can get  weathered and rough around the edges. Reading a well-made zine is like  finding a good letter from a friend, crammed in the back of a notebook  that you forgot about years ago. An email could never be the same. (I  see you rolling your eyes at me.)</p>
<p><strong>what is your  writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
It took seeing a disaster  area and having a friend ripped from my life to realize that what I  needed to write about was going to come from a place of grief, confusion  and a need for well-being. Getting knocked up and having amina inspired  me to write more, and I felt like the two aspects of the death of a  friend and the birth of a new one might just work well together. I can&#8217;t  write by hand. My handwriting can’t keep up with my ideas. I have a  very damaged brain from drugs, I have pretty difficult dyslexia and it  is hard for me to focus. I will come up with an idea I feel proud of,  and then a minute later only remember that I was happy with the idea,  the idea itself floating merrily away. Typing allows me to write fast,  even if it is only with my two pointer fingers. Every line of my zine is  pasted individually, which is actually how I edit. If I messed up a  sentence, I will paste the corrections right in, one tiny word at atime.  I edit things to death, needing to know that sentences make logical and  literal sense, and that the whole story is concise, mildly comic, and  correctly spelled. Side note: my pet peeves are as follows: 1.) phonies  2.) finding typos after I have already made photocopies.</p>
<p><strong>how  do you think the zine community or the process of making zines has  changed since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
I am not sure. I have never  been involved in any community in relation to zines, other than a penpal  here and there. I think more people feel entitled to make zines these  days, and while they have every right to make a zine, it is too bad that  they make a crappy, self-indulgent waste of time that might as well be a  photocopied printout of their myspace page. Ouch. Burn. Conversely:  there are fucking amazing zines out there that offer wisdom, insight,  support and talk wisely about delicate issues. It seems that a lot of  zines are really maturing, and I love that.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221;  to people in your life as a zinester? how do you explain it to people  who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
My family knows that I self-publish, but I  have never offered them a copy and they have never asked. This is  ultimately emblematic of our entire family relationship. They aren’t  interested in or proud of me, so I avoid every means of putting myself  out there to gain approval. I figure if they haven’t expressed interest  in me for nearly 26 years, why start now?</p>
<p><strong>what do you like  best about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
I love getting  letters from people who have read my zine. I love getting new pen pals.  However, it seems that zines have somehow lost that personal nature and  people don’t see them as a means of communication anymore. Now they are  something that you buy, and read for entertainment. I think it is  important to remember that zines are for contact and sharing.</p>
<p><strong>do  zines play a political role in your life? are you involved in other  d.i.y. projects? do they play a political role?</strong><br />
Sure, zines are a  great means of political networking. I do prefer zines that are more  personal aspects of being a politically-minded anarchist, though. The  biggest d.i.y. project I am involved in right now is being a mama,  building a house, and starting a small farm. I suppose this is  political, because we intend to grow the bulk of our own food, be able  to care for ourselves and our friends, and be able to avoid dealing with  the bastards. Maybe I should write a zine about that.</p>
<p><strong>what  advice might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
Be  honest, use your own voice, and don’t name-drop.</p>
<p><strong>what role  do you think distros can/should play in the zine community?</strong><br />
I  don’t really know much about distros, but I think it is a good way to  get my zines out there without me having to think about it. For young  kids who know that shit is fucked with the world, but are still figuring  out where they stand, distros can be a great way to find allies and  inspiration. Also, it is a good way for me to discover zines I may have  never seen otherwise.</p>
<p><strong>are there changes you&#8217;d like to see  in the zine community or your own zine creation?</strong><br />
Fewer dead  friends, more recipes.</p>
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			<media:title type="html">ciaraxyerra</media:title>
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		<title>interview with cindy crabb</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/05/interview-with-cindy-crabb/</link>
		<comments>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/05/interview-with-cindy-crabb/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 05 May 2010 21:04:35 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/?p=111</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? I started doing a zine in &#8217;92. Before that I&#8217;d been writing fiction and sort of trying to get stories printed in literary magazines. I wanted to write books some day, and &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/05/interview-with-cindy-crabb/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=111&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_112" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 233px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/self.gif"><img class="size-full wp-image-112" title="self" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/self.gif?w=223&#038;h=167" alt="" width="223" height="167" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">cindy writes the long-running zine &quot;doris,&quot; runs riot grrrrr distro, &amp; has been in a whole bunch of punk bands. she lives on a farm in athens, ohio. (interview originally posted september 25, 2007.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
I  started doing a zine in &#8217;92. Before that I&#8217;d been writing fiction and  sort of trying to get stories printed in literary magazines. I wanted to  write books some day, and that&#8217;s what everyone said you had to do &#8211;  build up a resume of magazines you&#8217;d been published in, but most  literary magazines published about 90% men, so it felt pretty hopeless.  I&#8217;d also been involved in the publication of an anarchist political  magazine called &#8220;Free Society,&#8221; that was pretty amazing and pretty  intellectual, and I didn&#8217;t feel like I had education level, or the  self-confidence to actually write political articles like that. I&#8217;d only  seen a couple zines, but they totally spoke to me &#8211; spoke to this  missing place in our world of media and information and expression and  politics and experience of the world &#8211; that you didn&#8217;t have to be an  expert to count &#8211; that there was beauty and value in working things out  in a public way, being human and real.</p>
<p><strong>why do you continue  making paper zines in the age of the internet? how do you think the  internet has affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
I love paper.  I love holding things in my hands. I love reading in bed. I don&#8217;t  always have electricity, let alone internet connection. I don&#8217;t believe  that everyone else has access to computers. I don&#8217;t like reading about  difficult things on a computer in a public space. I like to read under  the covers, falling asleep. I like to read on long car trips. I like to  read on picnics in the green green grass under the blue blue sky with  the river whispering and my sweet sister by my side. I like to say,  &#8220;look at this,&#8221; and show her something real. I like the feel of  typewriter keys under my fingers. and computers kind of give me a  headache.</p>
<p><strong>what is your writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
I  usually try and write and take a lot of notes and observations, do a  lot of free writing &#8211; stream of consciousness &#8211; to see what shows up the  most &#8211; and then I try and begin to focus my thoughts. It&#8217;s a long  process. I don&#8217;t just print whatever&#8217;s on my mind at the minute. I talk  to people about the things I&#8217;m thinking of writing about &#8211; try and  articulate my ideas out loud, and hear what they think, and see how  these conversations change or validate my thoughts. Then I get really  frustrated that I&#8217;ll never be able to get it down on paper. I get out  the manual typewriter, and usually it comes out a lot better with the  rhythm of those keys. I write a few pages, and edit them a few times,  read them out-loud (I usually talk out-loud while I&#8217;m writing to see how  the sentences sound), I feel like it&#8217;ll never get written. I lay out a  couple pages and show them to my sister and ask her if they&#8217;re stupid or  boring. She usually says no, but sometimes has some suggestions. I go  back and change them and re-lay it out. then I keep going. in that way.  If I don&#8217;t lay it out as I go, I get overwhelmed. I like to see the  progress and take time to draw pictures as I go.</p>
<p><strong>how do you  think the zine community or the process of making zines has changed  since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
I don&#8217;t feel like I&#8217;ve been part  of a zine community exactly. I&#8217;m surprised now how many people I know  because they did zines &#8211; but at the time it didn&#8217;t seem like a zine  community, it was more just that tons of people did zines. I don&#8217;t know  how it&#8217;s changed. It seems like people used to do more zine distros that  were just setting up tables at shows. More people ask me about  distribution now days, like it feels like more people think it&#8217;s  important to get their zines everywhere, and before people just did them  &#8211; did tiny press runs (like 20 copies) and that was fine. I liked that.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life as a zinester? how  do you explain it to people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
I just  explain it as it is. small magazines. self-published. non-commercial.</p>
<p><strong>what  do you like best about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
I&#8217;m  excited about my new issue (not out yet) because I think I&#8217;d feel  comfortable giving it to strangers on the street. The last four issues  have had articles that made me less apt to do that. What I like best is  that we can break alienation by telling our stories. I like that we can  learn to tell the truth about our lives and our experiences under   racistcapitalistpatriarchy, and that we can find ways to survive in the  practice of truth telling. I like when people start to believe in the  value of their lives and their ideas, and when they challenge themselves  to think deeply.</p>
<p>the things I don&#8217;t like are just petty  things and not worth talking about.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play a  political role in your life? are you involved in other d.i.y. projects?  do they play a political role?</strong><br />
I definitely consider my zine  to be political. I want to change the world, and I am an anarchist and a  feminist, and I think that in order to have widespread social change,  we need to really get to the heart of ourselves, to learn to stop being  so afraid of ourselves, to heal, and to fight and organize. All these  things and how they intertwine and make a life worth living. this is  what I try and write about. I don&#8217;t usually read a lot of  straightforward political zines these days &#8211; although I think they are  really useful. I tend to read political books, and more personal zines.</p>
<p>I  am involved in other projects as well &#8211; mostly women&#8217;s healtheducation,  and survivor support work.</p>
<p><strong>what advice might you have for  someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
be humble and  truthful and brave. do it for yourself, not to prove anything. do it  because you love it and it feels good and it helps you learn and become  stronger. it can be scary to put out a zine, and expecting feedback and  not getting it. it&#8217;s ok. it&#8217;s still worth it. people don&#8217;t always know  how to respond. editing can be fun, but also it doesn&#8217;t need to be  perfect.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think distros can/should play in  the zine community?</strong><br />
distros are great. more people should do  them. small distros are great. tabling at shows is awkward but a good  way to be able to hang out somewhere and feel like you have a purpose.</p>
<p><strong>are  there changes you&#8217;d like to see in the zine community or your own zine  creation?</strong><br />
I actually have no idea what the zine community is.  I&#8217;d like to have my zine come out more often, and hopefully I&#8217;ll be  able to do that.</p>
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		<title>interview with suze b.</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/03/interview-with-suze-b/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 03 May 2010 14:08:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved with zines/d.i.y. publishing? I didn’t know anything about zines when I put my first one together. I don’t mean I didn’t know how to put one together, because to me the whole point is that &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/05/03/interview-with-suze-b/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=107&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_108" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 273px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/suze.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-108" title="suze" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/05/suze.jpg?w=263&#038;h=175" alt="" width="263" height="175" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">suze has traveled the world doing activism work &amp; has written &quot;refugee&quot; &amp; &quot;sojourner,&quot; documenting her adventures &amp; the political situations of people she has met. (interview originally posted may 31, 2008.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved with zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
I  didn’t know anything about zines when I put my first one together. I  don’t mean I didn’t know how to put one together, because to me the  whole point is that there is no “way” to do it, and everyone can and  does put something together, whether they distribute it or not. But I  mean I hadn’t read all that many zines…definitely didn’t have favorite  zines or zine writers. I got in it purely for the accessibility. When I  put together “refugee” it was to give out to friends and family and  coworkers and fellow city college students/activists/strangers. Anyone  who I thought might actually read it. Because I told all the women I had  been living with on the Thai/Burma border that I would put the word out  about what was going down in Burma, I put together a zine…I didn’t know  a better way. I had the not-so-small goal of putting Burma on the map  of as many minds to which i might have access.</p>
<p><strong>why do you  continue making paper zines in the age of the internet? how do you think  the internet has affected the world of paper zines?</strong><br />
I really  have no idea how the internet has affected the world of paper zines  because truth is, I am an internetphobe. I just learned about youtube a  couple of weeks ago when my little brother came to visit me. I’ve got  email, but that is about as far as I go. I feel really funny and old or  something because I sometimes think that the internet is the death of  meaningfulness and our creativity…at least certain forms of it.</p>
<p><strong>what  is your writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
Wow. I wish I knew.  I am about to start another zine and I feel like I´m just stumbling  around. My zine-making is definitely about compiling though. I don´t  “write a zine”, rather, I put together a bunch of stuff I have written  in the past. I read old journals and ask close friends if they have any  copies of letters I recently wrote to them. Then I’ll cut and paste with  photocopies of photos I’ve taken or something that strikes my eye.  There isn’t much thought into the layout compared to the writing.  Sometimes I will rewrite things so that they are either more  understandable or just simply more legible. And sometimes I just say  screw it and photocopy what I got. No doubt, it is a fast process of  compiling more than anything else.</p>
<p><strong>how do you think the  zine community or the process of making zines has changed since you&#8217;ve  been involved?</strong><br />
I have no idea since I don’t follow it much. No  doubt, I read hella zines, but not really any series of zines, with the  exception of anything and everything by LB (out of Chicago&#8211;&#8221;So  Midwest&#8221;, &#8220;Truckface&#8221;, and &#8220;Susie is a Robot&#8221;) who is, by far, one of  the best writers I have ever encountered in any genre. Really fucken  genius. Anyway, I can’t really answer this question as I haven’t been  doing this or knowing about it that long.</p>
<p><strong>are you &#8220;out&#8221; to  people in your life as a zinester? how do you explain it to people who  don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
Uh, somewhat. I definitely don’t drop it on  folks unless it seems somehow relevant. I will give my zines to someone  who I think might be interested, but I don’t put a ton of time into  distro-ing or anything like that. I guess I have faith in that happening  on its own, if it is worthwile. And with all the feedback I’ve gotten  over the past couple of years, I think it is worth it.</p>
<p>On  the other hand, I work with youth and yes, I am “out” to some of them,  at least in the way that I encourage folks who are writing or taking  pictures or drawing or doing any kind of creative production to put  something together for their local community…not “get into” the existing  zine “community”, but to create a creative community of their own, in  whatever form that takes. We have some amazing examples of those  communities and role models here in Oakland: Youth Speaks, Youth Radio,  and Youth Movement Records, who are really present in just about  everything going on in the town.</p>
<p><strong>what do you like best  about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
Honestly, I’m not  sure I know what the zine world is. To me it feels like a little  teeny-tiny geographically-disparate but ideologically-similar kinda  community.  Which isn’t bad, but I guess I just don’t think of it as a  zine world. Anyway, I must selfishly say that I think I like the mail  best. I send that shit out there and have no idea where it goes…but when  someone drops a line from georgia or croatia or new zealand or portland  or ireland, acknowledging some engagement or critical thought in  regards to what I wrote, well, that definitely gets me off for a minute  or day or week, depending.  I get excited knowing that other people are  learning about what is going on Burma or thinking about riding freights  for the first time.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play a political role in  your life? are you involved in other d.i.y. projects? do they play a  political role?</strong><br />
Zines certainly play a political role in my life  in that they inform me and my thoughts. They may not affect politics as  politics is popularly defined in this country, but yes, they affect my  politics. I’ve been really affected lately by a couple of zines by sex  workers. Amazing stuff, of which &#8220;Rocket Queen&#8221; comes to mind.</p>
<p><strong>what  advice might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong><br />
Roll  with it for as long as it works for you and others involved. And give  zines to folks on the bus, elders &amp; youth! Branch out&#8230;because  zines are pretty self-serving to the “zine community” if we aren’t  reaching out to all kinds of folks.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you  think distros can/should play in the zine community?</strong><br />
Distros  should play whatever role the folks willing to put time and energy and  love into it hope for. Distro crews and folks rocking it solo get way  too little credit for all they put into it. I can’t really ask for more  or suggest more. I am incredibly impressed by and appreciative of this  effort…enough that I don’t think my criticism is really useful or in  touch with reality. I´m certainly not doing all that work to get zines  out there.</p>
<p><strong>are there changes you&#8217;d like to see in the zine  community or your own zine creation?</strong><br />
Well, I would definitely  like to be a part of a zine community that wasn’t madly white-dominant.  However, I don’t think it’s about getting folks who you want to be  involved into the scene, because, well, that’s just messed up. I am  spending more of my energy and time trying to get involved in shit where  those folks are already organizing and doing their own things…the  battles they see as worth fighting. I choose to support that instead of  thinking I should convince them to support whatever else I am doing. And  then the “I” and the “they” become a much stronger “we” and “us.”</p>
<p>You  can contact me for zines, feedback, trades, or whatever at <a href="mailto:soj@riseup.net">soj@riseup.net</a>. I am moving back to  Mexico in the fall of 2008, so drop me an email if you would like a  mailing address—-it is going to be changing a lot in the meantime.</p>
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			<media:title type="html">ciaraxyerra</media:title>
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		<title>interview with timothy colman</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/04/28/interview-with-timothy-colman/</link>
		<comments>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/04/28/interview-with-timothy-colman/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 28 Apr 2010 16:47:03 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/?p=103</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing? i stumbled upon the world of riot-grrrl-ish personal zines when i was 13 or 14, i think either on the internet or through pander zine distro. i wrote people letters and wrote &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/04/28/interview-with-timothy-colman/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=103&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_104" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 201px"><a href="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/timothy.jpg"><img class="size-full wp-image-104" title="timothy" src="http://papertraildossiers.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/timothy.jpg?w=191&#038;h=255" alt="" width="191" height="255" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">timothy has been making zines off &amp; on for about ten years. he currently lives in philadelphia. (interview originally posted september 17, 2007.)</p></div>
<p><strong>how did you get involved in zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong></p>
<p>i  stumbled upon the world of riot-grrrl-ish personal zines when i was 13  or 14, i think  either on the internet or through pander zine distro.  i  wrote people letters and wrote away for zines reviewed in the ones i  already had, and also that was the age of those tiny little ads tucked  into envelopes.  i remember writing to the addresses on there and  sending along stamps. zines spoke to parts of my crazy 14-year-old self  that didn&#8217;t have an outlet for expression anywhere else.  it was really  good for me to have this secret world of zines and zine penpals where i  could express things going on with me that it was too scary to  acknowledge in my day-to-day life.</p>
<p><strong>why do you continue  making paper zines in the age of the internet? how do you think the  internet has affected the world of paper zines?</strong></p>
<p>oh, man.  i  love paper and making things and pasting stuff together and i will put  things out there on paper that i would never, ever throw up on the  internet.  i like having something i can give to people, that they have  access in a concrete and immediate way.  i like having a piece of myself  i can give people as a gift.  zines are romantic &amp; visceral.  it&#8217;s  hard for me to say how the internet has affected the world of paper  zines because &#8220;the internet&#8221; was already starting when i discovered  zines.  but back then it seemed like the web of zine connections existed  in a paper world rather than an internet realm &#8212; there were a lot more  zine reviews and listings in zines, a lot more crazy tiny pieces of  paper floating around in envelopes, not to mention project-listing-zines  &#8212; i particularly remember <em>Cherry Cherry Red</em>, a full-size zine  that ciara used to do that was basically a compilation of pages people  had made &amp; sent outlining their projects and zines.</p>
<p><strong>what  is your writing/editing/layout process like?</strong></p>
<p>it depends.   for the zine i wrote about my dad (with the clever and inventive title  &#8220;Dad&#8221;), i wrote stuff down, by hand, typewriter, or computer, every day  for a month.  i wrote a lot of it sitting quietly in my room typing on a  laptop &#8212; but some was also just jotted down whenever it came to me:  for instance, on public transit, or on the job while i was supposed to  be grading middle school language arts essays. a couple times stuff came  to me while i was walking down the street and i just sat down on the  sidewalk and wrote until i was done.  a few days into February, i spent  10 hours straight going through it all, editing out the parts that i  didn&#8217;t want to share, printing out the text, cutting and pasting it onto  quarter-size sheets. actually a friend of mine was drawing huge  portraits from photos as decorations for a party she was having that  weekend, and we just sat there working side-by-side in her living room,  in almost total silence &amp; intense focus, until 4:30 in the morning!   i&#8217;m very much a cut-and-paste layout person &#8212; i like to have that kind  of direct, visceral control, even if it would be easier and faster to  use some sort of computer publishing program to do layout.  i like to  get my hands dirty, literally, to touch everything.</p>
<p><strong>how do  you think the zine community or the process of making zines has changed  since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong></p>
<p>i think most of what i had to  say, i answered in the internet question.  i don&#8217;t feel so connected to a  zine community anymore, i&#8217;m more linked in with ex-zinesters, so my  perspective is probably kind of skewed as to what&#8217;s changed.</p>
<p><strong>are  you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life as a zinester? how do you explainit to  people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong></p>
<p>not really.  i bring it up if i  want to, if it comes up. i don&#8217;t always like the different parts of my  life to overlap; i can be pretty guarded in my day-to-day life about  internal stuff. the only way i can put out writing that means anything  at all is by turning off the part of my brain that knows people might  read it some day.  so i don&#8217;t always share the zines i make with people  in my day to day life, or i might but i do it slowly.  i don&#8217;t really  explain it to people, i just either tell them or i don&#8217;t.</p>
<p><strong>what  do you like best about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong></p>
<p>i  like the possibility for exchange and growth, i like how personal and  intimate zines can be, i like the impulsiveness of zines as a form of  art and how they can express and hold things that might not be deemed  &#8220;important&#8221; or polished.  i don&#8217;t like how the zine world, like many  punk-related things, can sometimes be almost deliberately inaccessible  or closed off, and also unaware of everything else going on around it  that&#8217;s not within its bubble.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play a political  role in your life? are you involved in other d.i.y. projects? do they  play a political role?</strong></p>
<p>everything exists politically, as well  as concretely/emotionally/et cetera, but i wouldn&#8217;t say zines play a  particularly political role in my life.  my zines tend to be implicitly  rather explicitly political.  for me, they&#8217;re a forum to explore and  communicate interconnections between the emotional, personal &amp;  political &#8212; except i don&#8217;t even think those things are easily  separable.  i&#8217;m not sure what counts as a d.i.y. project, exactly, or  where to draw the line between d.i.y. &amp; grassroots as terms, but i&#8217;d  say i&#8217;m involved in other d.i.y. projects, including Philly&#8217;s Pissed  (radical organizing &amp; support work around sexual assault) and the  Philly Dudes Collective (anti-sexist men&#8217;s discussion/self-education  group).  yes, these things play a political role in my life.</p>
<p><strong>what  advice might you have for someone who is new to the zine community?</strong></p>
<p>read  and listen, write letters, take advantage of the potential for exchange  and dialogue. try to get to a zine library and get your hands on some  amazing old zines.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think distros  can/should play in the zine community?</strong></p>
<p>i like distros that  are closely engaged with the people whose zines they&#8217;re distributing,  and keep control in the hands of the people who make zines, while  allowing their creations to get a wider exposure and taking some of the  mail burden of their hands.</p>
<p><strong>are there changes you&#8217;d like  to see in the zine community or your own zine creation?</strong></p>
<p>for a  long time i was really hesitant to even make a zine, or more generally,  put writing out into the world publicly.  now that i&#8217;ve broken out of  that a little, my ongoing goal is to write more and put more writing and  more projects out into the world.  i would like to see the zine  community become more dispersed, diverse and engaged with other  communities. i would like people to keep making amazing zines about  their lives, their stories, politics &amp; visions.  one of the things  that&#8217;s potentially really awesome about zines is the opportunity for  feedback, dialogue, exchange, and i would always like to see more of  that.</p>
<p>on that note, if you want to talk about this stuff or  anything else, shoot me an email and we can write paper letters:  timot  at riseup dot net.</p>
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		<title>interview with tukru</title>
		<link>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/04/26/interview-with-tukru/</link>
		<comments>http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/04/26/interview-with-tukru/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 27 Apr 2010 00:48:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>ciara</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[(the image has gone missing. but, tukru writes the zine &#8220;your pretty face is going to hell&#8221; &#38; runs vampire sushi zine out of chatam, kent, in england. she&#8217;s a finnish emigre &#38; active in zine culture &#38; local girl &#8230; <a href="http://papertraildossiers.wordpress.com/2010/04/26/interview-with-tukru/">Continue reading <span class="meta-nav">&#8594;</span></a><img alt="" border="0" src="http://stats.wordpress.com/b.gif?host=papertraildossiers.wordpress.com&amp;blog=11694641&amp;post=101&amp;subd=papertraildossiers&amp;ref=&amp;feed=1" width="1" height="1" />]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>(the image has gone missing. but, tukru writes the zine &#8220;your pretty face is going to hell&#8221; &amp; runs vampire sushi zine out of chatam, kent, in england. she&#8217;s a finnish emigre &amp; active in zine culture &amp; local girl culture, including a regular riot grrrl dance night. check out her &lt;a href=&#8221;http://www.tukrulovesyou.com&#8221;&gt;website&lt;/a&gt; for more! interview originally posted september 13, 2008.)</p>
<p><strong>how did you get involved with zines/d.i.y. publishing?</strong><br />
oh it&#8217;s  a long long story. i first learned about zines when i was about 16 and i  stumbled upon some websites about riot grrrl. i didn&#8217;t see a real life  zine until a few years later but i was fascinated by the idea. and made  my own using the fax machine at my mum&#8217;s work for a photocopier. we  jammed it a few times. it was a few single sided a4s under the name  &#8220;kylmä kahvi&#8221; (&#8220;cold coffee&#8221;). it was all in finnish and about bands i  liked or had just discovered. i don&#8217;t think i ever actually gave anyone a  copy though, we only managed to make about two or three. i made my next  zine, my first perzine, &#8220;kersa x&#8221; a few years later when i befriended  the janitor &amp; receptionist at my school and got them to let me  photocopy things secretly. it was mostly fiction and tidbits of real  events disguised as fiction. that only lasted two or three issues that  were even distroed somewhere but i never really got involved with the  zine community then, just admired it from afar. i had a couple of years&#8217;  break when i moved the england to study photography. i just didn&#8217;t feel  i had anything to say, and i was finding enough of a creative outlet in  my website, livejournal and my photography. but then i decided to write  my dissertation about perzines. i did some art zines with my boyfriend.  and after i graduated i found myself semi-homeless &amp; living out of a  suitcase in my boyfriend&#8217;s bedroom i started writing &#8220;your pretty face  is going straight to hell&#8221; #2 about my experience. &amp; the rest is  history i guess.</p>
<p><strong>why do you continue making paper zines in the  age of the internet? how do you think the internet has affected the  world of paper zines?</strong><br />
i was on the internet before i got into  zines, and i&#8217;ve done all that&#8211;livejournals and websites and blogs and  while i enjoy doing them, they are not the same, or enough. you can&#8217;t  hold a website in your hand or keep it in your back pocket &amp; read it  on the bus or in the post office queue. i like the feeling of dried  glue &amp; bits of paper on my finger tips. paper zines are real, and  once you&#8217;ve given one away they can&#8217;t be deleted by a click of a button.  and that&#8217;s why i do paper zines.</p>
<p>i think the internet has  helped to spread the word about zines. obviously i would have probably  never heard of them with internet in my small hometown in southern  finland. &amp; it makes it easier to find new zines and people i&#8217;d  probably never find or meet otherwise. but i guess it has isolated  people from each other while bringing them together at the same time.  letters turn into emails to rushed myspace comments to no communication  at all. just anonymous paypal payments.</p>
<p><strong>what is your  writing/editing/layout process like?</strong><br />
i have a few different  approaches to my writing/layout process. sometimes i just sit down with  some bits from my three boxes of photocopies from books and magazines i  found at the college library, stick pictures on a piece of paper and  start writing. other times i scribble things onto scraps of paper or in  one of my notebooks and later type it up with the layout. my only real  editing happens when i re-type things from notebooks and when i decide  what actually goes in. i hardly ever re-do anything more than that. i  have a rather short attention span, and feel editing takes out the  spontaneity from my work. i have a tendency of faffing about quite a bit  at the end, rearranging pages and not being quite happy with whatever.</p>
<p><strong>how  do you think the zine community or the process of making zines has  changed since you&#8217;ve been involved?</strong><br />
as i said i haven&#8217;t really  been involved for that long. i don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s been that much change  in the past year. i&#8217;ve been semi-lurking for quite a few years but..  there&#8217;s not much i can say that i haven&#8217;t already in some other answer.</p>
<p><strong>are  you &#8220;out&#8221; to people in your life as a zinester? how do you explain it  to people who don&#8217;t understand?</strong><br />
almost everyone i know knows  about me being a zinester, including the ladies at the toyshop i work  in. i talked about zines a lot. but very few people i know in real life  have actually read them. i don&#8217;t really hand them out to people unless  they ask.</p>
<p>i explain zines as they are, little magazine types that  i photocopy myself. that&#8217;s not the hard bit. it&#8217;s when they ask, &#8220;what  are they about?&#8221; and i let out a nervous laugh and say, &#8220;me.&#8221; they tend  to get a bit confused and probably think i&#8217;m incredibly self-centered.  i&#8217;m used to that though, because most people react that way to  self-portraits. but to be honest, i&#8217;m the only person i can speak for.</p>
<p><strong>what  do you like best about the zine world? what do you like least?</strong><br />
least:  i sometimes feel a bit isolated because everything seems to revolve  around places is the u.s. &amp; canada and us european zinesters are a  bit of a minority. i wish there were more of us. but that&#8217;s not anyone&#8217;s  fault, just geography. i have the same problem with pretty much every  community. everyone lives so far away.</p>
<p>best: sharing experiences.  zines makes me feel less lonely.</p>
<p><strong>do zines play a political  role in your life? are you involved in other d.i.y. projects? do they  play a political role?</strong><br />
i guess doing anything diy (zines, crafts  etc) is inherently political. you know, doing things yourself instead of  waiting for someone else to do it for you. i think that&#8217;s a political  act. it might not change the world in a big way, but tiny bits at a time  which is better than doing nothing. i don&#8217;t really have any  non-zine-related d.i.y. project going on at the moment. when my  boyfriend still had a studio with some other local designers we used to  do crafty projects together but lately i haven&#8217;t really even seen  anyone. maybe once they manage to find a new studio. i knit &amp; make  jewelry &amp; occasionally sew bags (not so much lately because i don&#8217;t  have a sewing machine). i&#8217;d like to be more involved with stuff but i  have some rubbish excuses even i know are useless. i guess i&#8217;m just lazy  sometimes.</p>
<p><strong>what advice might you have for someone who is new  to the zine community?</strong><br />
write letters. don&#8217;t be imitated by  &#8220;famous&#8221; zinesters, at least most people are really really nice. read  lots of zines. get inspired, but don&#8217;t be a copycat (it&#8217;s a fine line).  don&#8217;t think about it too much, over-analyzing kills creativity. but do  have an inner shit filter. have fun with it. don&#8217;t be in it for the  money, it doesn&#8217;t happen. use bulk discounts whenever you can.  experiment.</p>
<p><strong>what role do you think distros can/should play in  the zine community?</strong><br />
i really like distros. i doubt half the  people who have now read my zine would have found it or i all the lovely  zines i love so much without distros. that&#8217;s really their basic role,  isn&#8217;t it? helping the zinester to get a larger audience to their zine.  sure, it takes away the contact between the zinester and the reader, but  a lot of time when someone buys my zine from my etsy shop, the only  communication between us is a paypal payment email, which really isn&#8217;t  that different from someone buying it from a distro instead. &amp; they  can get other people&#8217;s zines at the same time.</p>
<p><strong>are there  changes you&#8217;d like to see in the zine community or your own zine  creation?</strong><br />
i&#8217;d like people to write letters again, and i&#8217;d like to  start writing letters again (i&#8217;m working on it). i&#8217;d like to be less  scared every time i finish a zine.</p>
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