COMMUNITY SUBMISSION: Women Who Rock ‘Zine #1 (2013)
ZINE NAME: Women Who Rock: Making Scenes, Building Communities
AUTHOR: NA (compilation of POC and ally voices)
RELEASE: February 2013
ORIGIN: Los Angeles, California, USA
DESCRIPTION: Women Who Rock ‘Zine #1 is based on material created for, during, and inspired by the Women Who Rock Conference, which highlights both contemporary and past movements in and outside of Seattle by bringing together musicians, activists, writers, advocates, and scholars to talk about questions of female representation and access for women with music scenes. The first conference was held Feb. 17-18, 2011 in Seattle, Washington.
The ‘zine makes conference material accessible beyond typical academic journals.
READ NOW
As part of our advocacy, POCZP has made this publication available as an embed and free download so you can share as you like <3 Our dear ally Kate Wadkins has an essay you should check out on page 3 under Essays!
MORE INFO ABOUT WOMEN WHO ROCK http://womenwhorockcommunity.org/
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Editor’s Note: A Community Submission post results from POC folk submitting their own zine or zine call to be featured on the POC Zine Project Tumblr and other digital platforms. If you would like to share your zine with the POC Zine Project community, here’s how to do it.
When you submit, feel free to add some background, a description of your work and art and your mission statement. If you just send us the name of your zine, we’ll simply link back to a source for purchasing it and use the language you already have on your site.
As long as the zine was created/co-created by a person of color, we will always share Community Submissions. Enjoy!
POCZP accepts anonymous submissions and zine donations from POC. Click here for submission guidelines.
COMMUNITY SUBMISSION: QUARREL The Zine (2013)
TITLE: QUARREL The Zine
AUTHOR: Bay Area survivor led group QUARREL
REGION: Bay Area, California, USA
DATE: 2013
DESCRIPTION: Stories of survivor self determination, direct action, strategies for safer spaces and ripping patriarchy to shreds.
QUARREL was a Bay Area affinity group that formed to take names and kick ass with an anti-colonial, queer, feminist, boot. We support the Self-Determination of survivors and use harm reduction inspired techniques in survivor led actions to transform our communities into safer spaces.
We worked towards developing alternatives for addressing harm outside of the misogyny, racism, and classism of the police state. We support and value accountability processes, see them as critical to the practice of transformative justice, and believe they can take many forms. In this work we have found the tools of harm reduction useful for addressing people with patterns of abuse who are unwilling to be accountable. we have confronted perpetrators of assault, set boundaries, presented community demands and shared information as an act of self defense.
READ NOW
QUARREL has made it possible to read the entire zine online and download it from their blog. A highlight for us was “insurrecto-eggers-esque” by Ralowe trinitrotoluene ampu (page 77).
POCZP founder Daniela Capistrano met Ralowe at the Anarchist People of Color Convergence in New Orleans in the summer of 2012, where we also met our first zine partner Xeryle of SlushPilePress!
DOWNLOAD
Booklet print layout:
http://quarrelthezine.files.wordpress.com/2013/03/quarrel_zine_booklet_final1.pdf
POCZP will be making a read-only/web friendly layout available soon as an embed and download. Bookmark this page, as we’ll add the link here.
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Editor’s Note: A Community Submission post results from POC folk submitting their own zine or zine call to be featured on the POC Zine Project Tumblr and other digital platforms. If you would like to share your zine with the POC Zine Project community, here’s how to do it.
When you submit, feel free to add some background, a description of your work and art and your mission statement. If you just send us the name of your zine, we’ll simply link back to a source for purchasing it and use the language you already have on your site.
As long as the zine was created/co-created by a person of color, we will always share Community Submissions. Enjoy!
POCZP accepts anonymous submissions and zine donations from POC. Click here for submission guidelines.
ZINE SPOTLIGHT: ‘Colita de Rana: Love, Identity & Panochas’ and ‘Watermelon: and other things that make me uncomfortable as a black person’
By Cata, POCZP Intern
“Colita de Rana…Love, Identity & Panochas” by Tracy García and company (2012)
This zine opens with a labeled cartoon vagina. Ok, wait. Back story: Colita de Rana = frog tail—it’s from a saying that signifies healing. And: Panochas = Pussy.
The ideas in this zine were loved into pages by anger, angst and ambition. I know this because I saw it’s spirit awake when one of my friends (a co-author) attended a QPOC, Queer People of Color conference back in the day and we took a Panocha workshop. The most powerful experiences, people, books, zines, movies, artwork plant the seeds of future creation. This is the fruit of one of those seeds. In Colita de Rana there are plenty of female anatomy lessons, self-love reminders and a gesture to genetic trauma.
My favorite page is a poem by a lady from Inglewood (my dad’s old stomping grounds). She talks about the domestication of love… “how did love become so scary? was it the moment it got domesticated?” This a powerful question hidden on the third page of the zine.
Seeing this quote through the zine’s title can lead the question: How can we heal from domesticated love? What is that? Certainly it involves government control and production of a certain kind of love.
Page 8 displays a cut-out of a dinosaur called a “clitosaurus” above the prehistoric animal is a quote about the deportation of lesbian undocumented immigrants in the 1990’s. Shit is real. Colita de Rana lets us know.
Disarming dinosaurs still deliver through history. Our history, herstory unknown rather wished erased and gone but still lingers at the bottom of some hearts. This anatomy textbook for the “exploration of love, identity and panochas” is humble but proud. Check yo’ self, she says.
Page 10: heterosexual questionnaire. It’s your turn, straight folks, to have your coming of age story be commodified, died this hue then this shade and retried again and again —tooth combed for possible in-congruencies or untruths.
I love this zine and I hope they keep on the riot. This zine would be a great new friend to all questioning and angry Xican@s. Bring them on.
READ & DOWNLOAD COLITA DE RANA
“Watermelon…and other things that make me uncomfortable as a black person” by Whit Taylor (2011)
I found this gem at zine fest in dc this past July. Really, nothing can beat a fantastic new zine in the dead of summer heat when you think who is so noble and great that they are out promoting their zine? And then, there is someone.
Besides the fortuitous timing Whit Taylor is a great mini story shower/teller. In her zine she is showing us why certain things don’t roll so smooth for her. She keeps the tone light even during more serious topics. Taylor is able to do this because of a dry and even tone through out the story. Her drawings rock. They remind me of the drawings from Tina’s Mouth, another awesome lady comic.
Watermelon can easily find a place among folks working to deconstruct the stereotypes that can plague different communities. Humanizing an experience is a big part of breaking down stereotypes. When you don’t know someone personally its easier to paint them as something their not.. literally. Tayor does a great job at this. In fact my favorite quote from her is: “I love Alice in Chains, which according to my uncle makes me a teenage white boy. I grew up on my parents’ 1960’s & 70’s soul music but became a victim of 90’s suburban life. So sue me.”
Her honesty is fresh. And yet it leaves me wondering about somethings… like what about her cousins in the frame about New Orleans? What kind of comic/zine would they write? Would they agree with her? These are questions that often come up for myself as I and many other creators find pieces of their autobiographies show up in their work…would my family/community agree? How do they see it?
And this is what’s great about Watermelon. This is how Taylor experienced growing up where she did, being who she is. Really that’s all we got: our experience and it’s one that others are either going to learn from or identify with. And zines really open up a space for folks who usually don’t show up in books or magazines to share their version.
Thanks Ms. Whit Taylor, for sharing yours.
Watermelon is a great zine about one girls’ reflections on the stereotypes that live in her world. Specifically this zine helps to thwart the power these stereotypes might have on others by simply humanizing them and breaking them down. After all it did spark a pretty humorous discussion in my house about our own battles with awkward/embarrassing moments striving to straddle the lines between our cultures and the way others see us in our culture.
It’s a daily deal, as is shown by Whit Taylor in Watermelon.
ORDER WATERMELON HERE.
LEARN MORE ABOUT WHIT TAYLOR whimsicalnobodycomics.com
COMMUNITY: Do you want to review zines for POCZP? Learn more about POCZP internship & volunteer opportunities here. We are still accepting applications.
If you are interested in POCZP leading a workshop or other event in collaboration with your organization - worldwide - email poczineproject@gmail.com.
ABOUT CATA
Cata is a two-spirit mixed race writer/yogi/graphic novel reader/zine lover in Washington, D.C., originally from the LBC (Long Beach California).
COMMUNITY SUBMISSION: menudo & Herb: A Little Book to Reach for During Big Bowel Movements
ZINE NAME: menudo & Herb: A Little Book to Reach for During Big Bowel Movements
AUTHOR: Myriam Gurba
RELEASE: January 2013
ORIGIN: Long Beach, California, USA
WHERE TO BUY: http://www.etsy.com/shop/Lesbrain
DESCRIPTION: “A poetryish, smart alecky zine that has too much Spanglish”
menudo & Herb is a little book designed to do as its title suggests, ease you through those moments of hygienic struggle by “lightening your load.” It contains approximately 57 poetry-like substances, such as “Blended Families Taste Like Chicken,” “Egyptian Geese,” “Recipe for Lasagna,” “Cannabis Sisyphus,” and “Pain in My As.” If you don’t enjoy this product as a poetry collection, you might enjoy it as rolling paper.
SAY HI: lesbrain.wordpress.com
A White Girl Named Shaquanda is Myriam’s most recent novella.
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Editor’s Note: A Community Submission post results from POC folk submitting their own zine or zine call to be featured on the POC Zine Project Tumblr and other digital platforms. If you would like to share your zine with the POC Zine Project community, here’s how to do it.
When you submit, feel free to add some background, a description of your work and art and your mission statement. If you just send us the name of your zine, we’ll simply link back to a source for purchasing it and use the language you already have on your site.
As long as the zine was created/co-created by a person of color, we will always share Community Submissions. Enjoy!
POCZP accepts anonymous submissions and zine donations from POC. Click here for submission guidelines.
COMMUNITY SUBMISSION: Mixed Girl Zine
ZINE NAME: Mixed Girl Zine
CREATOR: Sister Bell Zines
RELEASE: September 5, 2012
ORIGIN: Curated in Sydney, Australia. The submissions are from worldwide.
BUY NOW (Vol.1 & 2): http://sisterbellzines.bigcartel.com/
DESCRIPTION: ”It’s a collection of art, poetry, writings (including personal and essays) about the complicated and often contradictory experiences of being a mixed-race girl. Submissions were open to any girl who identifies as mixed, biracial, and/or multiracial.
It created a space where people understood each other as girls and as mixed race, which is something rare when being mixed race means you are often an outsider in most situations.”
SAY HI: sister-bell.tumblr.com
COMMUNITY: If you are looking for more zines about being biracial/mixed-race, you can’t go wrong by exploring Nia King’s many zines <3
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Editor’s Note: A Community Submission post results from POC folk submitting their own zine or zine call to be featured on the POC Zine Project Tumblr and other digital platforms. If you would like to share your zine with the POC Zine Project community, here’s how to do it.
When you submit, feel free to add some background, a description of your work and art and your mission statement. If you just send us the name of your zine, we’ll simply link back to a source for purchasing it and use the language you already have on your site.
As long as the zine was created/co-created by a person of color, we will always share Community Submissions. Enjoy!
POCZP accepts anonymous submissions and zine donations from POC. Click here for submission guidelines.
ZINE SPOTLIGHT: Chris Montez, teenage rockstar
CREATOR: Gabby Gamboa (who we met at the 2012 S.F. Zine Fest)
YEAR: 2011
ORIGIN: Bay Area, California, USA
DESCRIPTION: A mini-comic about obscure (but beloved) Latino pop artist Chris Montez.
In Gabby’s own words:
My father told me a story about how growing up in the 1950s, he and all of the other Mexican American kids in his neighborhood would (falsely) boast about being related to rocker Ritchie Valens. That got me interested in researching the history and obscurities of Chicano rock, and sharing what I find.
When asked in this interview what advice she would give to aspiring comic artists and zinesters, Gabrielle Gamboa suggested the following:
Don’t limit yourself by studying only one technique or medium. Practice drawing from observation. Learn about art from before you were born.
Chris Montez isn’t presently listed on Gabby’s Etsy shop, but contact her if you’re interested in purchasing.
Interested in learning more about some of the other selections in our physical archive? Click here.
ZINE SPOTLIGHT: OOMK Zine is out NOW! <3
Back in December of 2012, POCZP helped fund One of My Kind zine.
“We’re really keen to share the thoughts of young active, creative women, especially Muslim women, like ourselves, who don’t really get heard.”
Click here to order yours now or to find out how to submit to the next issue.
TITLE: OOMK Issue #1
RELEASE: 1/27/2013
REGION: London, UK
CREATORS: Sofia Niazi, Sabba Khan and Rose Nordin
DESCRIPTION: One of My Kind (OOMK) is a highly visual, handcrafted small-press publication. Our content largely pivots upon the imaginations, creativity and spirituality of women.
Visually, we are explorative and have a dreamy aesthetic. We use tactile recycled paper, hand illustrated embellishments, collage and lomography.
SAY HI: oomkzine@gmail.com
Girls Get Busy feminist zine distro will be selling OOMK very soon, check out their store. We don’t see a U.S.-based distro source yet, so if you see one, let us know! If you want to BE one ;) contact OOMK.
COMMUNITY SUBMISSION: Spit & Rip Zine (January 2013)
TITLE: Spit & Rip Zine
CREATOR: Bernie Button
RELEASE: January, 2013
ORIGIN: San Diego, CA, USA
ORDER DETAILS: Available at Etsy Shop, PaperMulatta
DESCRIPTION:
I am a 25 year old mixed (black & white) girl on the west coast. Basically I was super hype about the selection of zines available on the net, UNTIL I realized that most of them don’t come from my perspective: a struggling minority womanist. So I’m trying to help fill in that gap. Writing is thinking, so I’m just plotting the universe with you guys. Hope you enjoy.
SAY HI: Buttonface.tumblr.com
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Editor’s Note: A “Community Submission” post results from a POC submitting their own zine to be featured on the POC Zine Project Tumblr. If you would like to share your zine with the POC Zine Project community, here’s how to do it.
When you submit, feel free to add some background, a description of your work and art and your mission statement. If you just send us the name of your zine, we’ll simply link back to a source for purchasing it and use the language you already have on your site.
As long as the zine was created/co-created by a person of color, we will always share Community Submissions. Enjoy!
COMMUNITY SUBMISSION: The Radical Doula Guide: A Political Primer for Full-Spectrum Pregnancy and Birth Support
TITLE: The Radical Doula Guide: A Political Primer for Full-Spectrum Pregnancy and Childbirth Support
CREATOR: Miriam Zoila Pérez
ORIGIN: Brooklyn NY, USA
RELEASE: August 2012
DESCRIPTION:
The guide provides an introduction to full spectrum doula work—supporting people during all phases of pregnancy, including abortion, miscarriage, birth and adoption—as well as a discussion of how issues like race, class, immigration, gender and more affect our work as doulas. You can read an excerpt of the introduction published at Womens Enews.
SAY HI: radicaldoula@gmail.com
http://radicaldoula.com/the-radical-doula-guide/
To purchase a copy, go here.
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Editor’s Note: A “Community Submission” post results from a POC submitting their own zine to be featured on the POC Zine Project Tumblr. If you would like to share your zine with the POC Zine Project community, here’s how to do it.
When you submit, feel free to add some background, a description of your work and art and your mission statement. If you just send us the name of your zine, we’ll simply link back to a source for purchasing it and use the language you already have on your site.
As long as the zine was created/co-created by a person of color, we will always share Community Submissions. Enjoy!
Meet POCZP’s first Legacy Series intern: Itoro Udofia!
NAME: Itoro Udofia
ROLE: First dedicated intern for the POC Zine Project’s Legacy Series
REGION: West Coast, USA
COMMUNITY: Join us in welcoming Itoro! You’ll be seeing her contributions manifest on this Tumblr and in other digital and physical spaces very soon …. <3
Bio: Itoro is a first generation writer, artist, and educator of Nigerian origin living in the Bay Area. She develops programs for youth of color (Youth Programs Associate at the Museum of the African Diaspora) where they have a space to honor their histories and thrive. You can find her writings on Your World News, People of Color Organize, Rain and Thunder: A Radical Feminist Journal, Womanist Musings, and her own blog Thoughts of my Mind. Her writings focus on the intersections and dynamics of race, class, gender, power, survival/healing and education.
She also teaches an African History course and when she is not doing that, she works closely with a community organization dear to her heart, working to abolish the school to prison pipeline and hearing the youth speak their truth to move to action. She is happy to be a Bay Area resident and feels like here, she has found a bit of peace and a bit of home!
Itoro’s excited to be an intern with the POC Zine Project because it is a collective that uplifts and cares about what people of color have to say and acknowledges what they have always said.
Some texts that furthered her political consciousness and commitment to uplifting the voices of POC and their struggles are The Revolution Starts at Home, This Bridge Called My Back and Steve Biko’s I Write What I Like: Selected Writings. All these zines and texts named what it means to speak out from the margins and hold to ones principle in building a world that includes us all, and calls for a life of love and continued struggle in ALL our spaces, seen and unseen. Moreover, with many people coming out from the margins, she did not feel alone.
Ultimately, Itoro hopes to be a part of a larger community committed to making our written word available, accessible and visible. Other perks to the internship are gaining more knowledge and organizing with radical zinesters. As an intern, she hopes to further her knowledge about zine culture and help get our Voices out. She is excited and ready to begin this journey and is happy to call the POC Zine Project her media home.
COMMUNITY: Learn more about POCZP internship & volunteer opportunities here. We are still accepting applications for the Summer and Fall sessions.
IN ITORO’S OWN WORDS
Here are some excerpt from her application that are important to share:
Zine culture, specifically the material production of our knowledge is important to me because our voices are often co-opted, misused or completely erased in the literary canon. I have experienced this dangerous and painful trend most profoundly as an educator within the context of radical and progressive education. Save for bell hooks, Sonia nieto, Michele Foster and a few other people of color directly explaining the intricacies of power and privilege as a teacher of color, outlining a liberatory pedagogy through navigating a hostile terrain and offering something invaluable to the field through articulating underlying race, class and gender dynamics, it was difficult to fully relate to radical literature. I found that much of its thought and analysis was filtered through a white liberal/radical context. Even the class analysis was lacking because the white elephant in the room, white supremacy, was not directly dealt with. These power dynamics alone, the dynamics of who gets listened to, who controls the written word, who controls the publishing house, the way information gets told is what fuels my commitment to writing and working with people of color to have complete autonomy over their material.
… The POC Zine project is necessary at this particular time where knowledge and overall experiences are actively ignored. Centering people of color’s material contributions as a source of is important, and is a part of honoring a larger history of people who kept going in spite of these hurdles.
SOME OF ITORO’S WRITING
In a Quiet Place, A Radical Profeminist (Fall 2012)
In a Quiet Place, The Black Feminist Manifesto (Fall 2012)
In a Quiet Place, Your World News (Fall 2012)
Missy Anne’s on the lookout for me, Your World News (Summer 2012)
And When You Leave, Take your Pictures with you, Your World News (Spring 2012)
Black Power, Leadership and Privilege, Your World News (Winter 2012)
Shedding the Tears, Looking Back, Moving Forward, People of Color Organize (Winter 2012)
Conversations with a Student Teacher of Color, Womanist Musings (Fall 2010)
ABOUT THE LEGACY SERIES
Kicking off with FIRE!!, POC Zine Project will make zines by people of color created from the 1700s-1990s available to read and share.
Every Friday (Editor’s note: date pushed to February), you will find a legacy zine by a person of color on poczineproject.tumblr.com. We will share more details in 2013.
WHY WE ARE FOCUSING ON LEGACY ZINES
People of color in the U.S. have produced independent publications (zines) for decades. Many of these zines were political in nature, creating cracks in the lens of white supremacy that shaped (and continues to inform) popular culture and legislation.
These zines were new maps to our liberation, countering the negative propaganda of what people of color looked like, thought and were capable of achieving.
We want the world to know about these legacy zines, so we are going to archive and share them to the best of our ability.
We look forward to partnering with distros, academic spaces, libraries, anti-authoritarian collectives, literary journals, bloggers and more to share the Legacy Series.
“NEW” ZINESTERS: We will still share information about new and upcoming zines by people of color :) Please continue to submit your zines to the archive.
ABOUT THE RACE RIOT! TOUR
POC Zine Project held its first Race Riot! Tour in 2012, producing 20 events in 14 cities, which included speaking engagements at six universities. Click here to view photos from the POC Zine Project: 2012 Race Riot! Tour tour finale at Death By Audio in Brooklyn and access all the tour stop recaps.
We will be taking the Race Riot! Tour through 14 more cities in 2013. Stay tuned!
SUPPORT POC ZINE PROJECT
If everyone in our community gave $1, we would more than meet our fundraising goal for 2013. If you have it to spare, we appreciate your support. All funds go to our 2013 tour, the Legacy Series and the poverty zine series.
DONATE link via PayPal: http://bit.ly/SHdmyh
You can also send well-concealed cash or a check! Email daniela@dcapmedia.com for details or if you have questions.
Info about the poverty zine series: http://bit.ly/RLVTVt











