. 

What  is a zine?  No, seriously. I’m not trying to  sound like an MTV  reporter in 1996 trying to  hype a “youth fad,” I’m  genuinely  questioning how the combined loss of  generational history and  the  massive rise in independent publishing over the  last five years  has  blurred lines and broken down walls. When I got into zines  it was a   culture of barter, freedom of expression, and rebellion against    established media. We published zines because we wanted to communicate   and  because what we had to say and how we wanted to say it was of no   interest to  commercial publishers. That was fine, they had their world   and we had ours.  Zines that got big enough to carry ISSNs or barcodes   of any kind were scorned.  And anything with an ISBN might as well have   carried the mark of the beast. We  were in a culture war of sorts,   defying the commodification of art and ideas.  Many of the people I knew   and traded with at that time were in their teens and  twenties. We  were  figuring ourselves out and zines were how we did it.
In many cases zines actually lead (or  even helped) us into  careers as  librarians or in publishing. I fall into the  latter camp. I  started  out working for a non-profit that supported itself  through  publishing.  From there I went to work for a distributor that   specialized in small  presses. In some cases, the small book publishers I  worked  with were  like zine publishers – only they were older and had  the capital to   fund their projects. They had something to say, wanted  to connect with  readers,  and commercial publishers weren’t interested.  It has often  been said that zines  are defined by a lack of financial  gain. Well, if  that is the case, most book  publishers I know are  actually zine  publishers. 
I watched the struggles these small  publishers were  experiencing and  they mirrored some of what we faced in  zineland. Up  until 1998 we had 
Factsheet 5  to help readers and   publishers find each other. Small book publishers  had no such vehicle.  Other  zine review zines sprang up, but none of  us ever had the  distribution into the  retail market that 
F5  had.  Speaking of distribution,  it is very hard for small presses to  get  distributed and when they do it can be  expensive.  Again, this is a   similar  barrier in zines. How many of us remember zines that just   disappeared – how  many of you realize that some disappeared because   their distributor (anyone  remember Desert Moon? Fine Print?) went under   owing them money, which meant  that print and postage bills went  unpaid  and the publication was compromised or  ultimately folded. How  many of  us had to scale back after Tower went under?
I was working with these small presses  as POD (print-on-demand)   technologies started really developing. At that time  stores didn’t   want to touch anything they thought was POD because they felt the    supply was limited and the quality was poor – sound familiar zine   people?
Let’s flash forward a few years. In  1995, 113,589 ISBN’s were   registered with Bowker; in 2010 there were 316,480.  What happened?   Fucking independent publishers happened! We all talk about the  death of   print (both zines and books), but look at those numbers. More books    are being published than ever before. We act like blogs are killing   zines. What  if books are killing zines? What if the people, faced with   all the barriers we  faced in 1995, wanted to publish and couldn’t.   Chances are some of them would  be making zines. Instead, in 2011 the   barriers between the worlds of book  publishing and zine publishing are   disintegrating. If I wanted to create a book  today there are companies   that will help me do everything from registering an  ISBN (I don’t  have  to buy an expensive block of 10 or 100 now), do the layout  in an   automated template, and set my file up with a POD printer. Imagine    something like that existing in 1995! Is what you have created a zine? A    chapbook? A book? What the hell is it? And 
does  that matter?
Within the book publishing world there  is a lot of identity  crisis  going on right now. Digitization and the easy  access to the  industry  have broken down so many walls that used to exist. I  mean,  even the  term book is being challenged by the larger notion of 
content.   Here’s a question to exemplify  how things are changing: What is your   favorite recording artist or song? Did  you hear the music or picture a   band or person? Or did you picture a CD, LP, or  MP3 file? If you   pictured the recording artist you are interested in the  content. If you   pictured the CD you are interested in the format or media. The  term   book or zine defines how you will read, not what you will read. It is   the  media, not the content. What matters more to you?
These days I wear several hats in the  land of publishing (and a  few in  zineland) and some of my focus is digital  content. I have read  on an  e-reader and on a laptop, and I can see the  potential value of  this  media, but as you can see by this zine in your hands I  have not  given  up traditionally printed zines or books. One thing I see ebooks   doing  is something we all were doing in 1995 – independently produced  ebooks   are challenging the establishment.  They  are providing readers  with  alternatives. They are often cheaply produced or  free and filled  with  typos and poorly rendered design. But are they zines? No,  of  course  not. But they sound a hell of a lot like a zine, don’t they?
So this brings me back to my original  question? What is a zine?  Is a  definition created to try and explain the “fad”  to the  uninitiated in  1995 still accurate? I don’t think so. I think that   zines, like  publishing, have undergone a few changes and that we should  keep  our  community open instead of trying to hold onto established  labels  because we  are fearful of change. Does that mean I think a blog  is a  zine? No, I don’t.  But maybe you do. Does that mean I think a  paper  zine created by cutting and  pasting directly from a blog is a  zine?  Well, yes, technically, but I also  think it is hella lazy.
If we are going to have the label talk,  let’s step back in time  a  moment and discuss how we got here. Current  nomenclature stems from   the term “fanzine.” When I was a wee geek I actually  subscribed to a   few SF fanzines, but didn’t really think about their  relationship to   zines until I was firmly entrenched in zine culture. “Fan  magazines”   are another thing entirely. An example would be Sports Illustrated –    this is created as a for-profit venture and caters to the interest of   fans. So  back to fanzines – these were everything from DIY to   semi-professional  publications that originated in science fiction   circles. In many cases they  were modeled after existing professional   publications. These were generally  genre specific to a largely   homogenized audience. Existing publications  provided a blueprint. Not a   lot of boundaries being pushed here.
People like to write about their  obsessions, so early SF  fanzine  culture lent itself to other fan-based genres,  such as horror,  music,  and sports (note that these were traditionally “male  fan” genres  –  we’ll get back to that in a minute). Music will become an  important   one as independent music gains a foothold, but commercial music    magazines and radio stations refuse to cover and play these underground   bands.  Sub-cultures form around these marginalized arts.
For early fanzines, there was an attempt  at aesthetic – again   emulating professional magazines. Remember, we are talking  about the   ’30s-’50s here, so these were being printed on mimeographs and ditto    machines. These took time to set up and were labor intensive. So what   happens  to bring modern zines to the fore? Two things: 1) technology –   photocopies  become cheap and accessible and 2) the cultural revolution   of the ’60s leaves  people realizing that mainstream media is not   addressing their interests or  culture. That thread of individuality   flourishes in the ‘70s and people start  documenting their own lives and   cultures. This is passed onto the next  generation and participation  in  zine culture peaks in the mid-‘90s. So to get  back to the idea of   fanzines covering “male dominated” genres – the rise of the  women’s   movement allowed for societal changes to begin in the ‘70s and one    interpretation of those changes led to the rise in Riot Grrrl zines in   the  ‘90s. Unlike with fanzines, zines as we know them today were very   inclusive of  people and sub-cultures that had little power in   mainstream society. If you  were LGBTQ, dealing with mental health   issues, or just the class weirdo, zines  were a relatively safe place to   call home.
Zines were filled with raw emotions and  gritty personalities.  Again, a  huge difference from fanzines. People were  learning to talk  and write  and it felt anonymous because often the only  interaction  writers had  occurred months after they finished a zine and dropped  it  in the mail.  People talked about obsessions, traveling, bands they  liked,  abuse,  politics, and their personal experiences. Aesthetics were  often not a   high priority and legibility seldom taken into  consideration (margins,  what are  margins?). Cut & paste was done  because it was all we had  in the old days.  And it can be done in a way  that is legible. Sloppy  is just sloppy.
When I got into zines there were a few  basic criteria used to define what a zine was (and none of them 
really   worked). 1) it was created  without intent of monetary gain and was   bartered for other zines; 2) fewer than  500 (or 5000 – depends on who   you ask) copies were printed; 3) zines allowed  voices who had no other   outlet to be heard; 4) no ISSN or ISBN (ironically,  this means that   zinedom’s sacred cow, 
Factsheet 5, was, in fact, not a    zine). So did zines that started out small and grew get grandfathered   in? For  some people, yes. For others, ridiculous indy creed was more   important. And  truthfully, a lot of us were just in it for mail and   could care less about  debating 
Bust’s standing as a zine.
The boom period in the ‘90s saw a lot of  zines born and die.  Much like  the early ‘00s saw a ton of blogs born and die.  Many of the  same  reasons that drove people to create zines drove them to create   blogs,  only blogs were faster, easier, cheaper, and allowed for  immediate   gratification. Now, headed into the 10’s, some of us see  where a blog  can in  fact be useful and compliment a paper zine without   cannibalizing it. Technology  has, in many respects, helped push forward   the agenda of book and zine  publishers and to not use tools that are   within our reach to help us complete  our ultimate missions seems   self-defeating. How many people reading this  learned about the Revenge   of Print project 
online?
So how do the early definitions of  “zine” and “fanzine” hold up  in  2011? Well, email has pretty much killed my  neurotic compulsion to   stop by the PO Box regularly. Instead, I neurotically check  my email.   The Internet now allows for a din of individual voices to be heard  and   finding likeminded souls is not the same weird crap shoot of putting   your  zine in an envelope and sending it off to a PO Box wondering if   you are about  to meet someone who will become a part of your life. (A   brief tangent –  remember how it used to be weird when people said they   met online? Now try  explaining to people that you met your best friend   through the mail and you  have never actually met in person. )
I think the original ideas behind the  labels “fanzine” and  “zine” are  dated. I think fanzines could learn from zines  by opening up  to more  diverse, personal, and critical content. Similarly, I  think  that zines  could learn from fanzines and start making publications that   are  easier to read and dare I say it – actually interesting to look at.  Do  we  hold to the old definitions and try and work within those boxes?  Do  we create  new terms to explain what is going on now? I don’t have  any  answers. Here is a  good example why – someone uses a library  computer  to create a publication. She  cannot afford a computer,  internet  access, or copies, so she creates a PDF and  emails that to  people or  posts it to a site like Scribd. She is giving it away  and  soliciting  people to send her their zines (via email or mail). Her   motivation and  content are very much in line with old-school zine ethos,  but  her  method of delivery is new-school. Has she created a zine?
Personally, I would love to read more  international zines, but  postage  is often a barrier. Is a PDF of a zine created  and printed in  New  Zealand, but emailed to the rest of the world any less of a  zine?   These are the questions I am asking myself as a zine writer, zine   editor,  zine reviewer, book publisher, and book distributor as I   continue to move  forward as a creator and merchant of words and   content.
As I see it, what matters is intent. The 
how and the 
why are more important to me than the 
what. I view myself as an independent publisher, who enjoys zines  as a culture and medium. I edit and manage 
Xerography Debt for the community  and co-edit 
Rigor Mortis   to fulfill my creative needs. My monetary  goal is sustainability,   which pretty much means attempting to break even based  on content. I   don’t sell ad space, nor do I sell my mailing list (again, 
F5 is held aloft, but there were a lot of rumors about Seth Friedman bartering and  selling the 
F5 mailing list. Our culture wasn’t what held value, but  what we could be sold.). I define 
XD and 
RM   as zines to those  who understand the term and to those who don’t they   are “small press  publications.” Many reviews have defined 
RM as a fanzine (which makes my  co-editor apoplectic). None of these labels change the content. 
So these are my truths. Your truths may  vary or settle during   shipping. And the truths of today may not be the truths  of yesterday or   tomorrow. If you must have a label and can’t find one that  suits you,   make one up. The important thing is that we each examine the what,   how,  and why and make sure they are in line with our intent.
In the words of The Dude, “Yeah, well,  you know, that's just,  like,  your opinion, man,” so I say to you, dear readers,  what is 
your   truth? What is your  opinion on the state of zines? Why do you or did   you publish? Do you publish  looking forward or backward? Is it about   revolution or nostalgia? Or both?  Please send me your thoughts –   roughly 250-500 words – with a deadline of  October 15, 2011. This will   become a new series called, “The Voices of  Zinedom.” In this instance,  I  embrace modern technology as a time-saver and  would prefer to  receive  responses by email (
Davida@leekinginc.com). 
Just keep  reading – no matter what, no matter how.