Zine Archives Preserve Trans Survival and Storytelling


On an August night in 1991, Nancy Jean Burkholder was kicked out of the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival. It wasn’t because she was disrupting the event—it was because she was transgender. The lesbian feminist women’s music festival, which had been an annual event in Oceana County since 1976, claimed that they had a “womyn-born-womyn” policy that excluded trans women from attending. Nancy left the festival grounds, devastated, and returned to her home in New England. When the festival rolled around the following year, Nancy did not attend, but her presence was still felt. Trans women could not go in, and neither could their supporters—but zines could.

In response to Nancy’s expulsion from the festival, trans organizers and cisgender allies organized Camp Trans, a demonstration outside of the Oceana County festival. Though they were unable to enter, trans organizers and cisgender allies funneled literature into the festival. They posted flyers debunking gender myths on the port-o-potties and passed out surveys to gauge support for trans women among the festival crowd.

The protest became an annual tradition, and zines were an integral part of Camp Trans. A 2001 Camp Trans zine, now held in the Queer Zine Archive Project, describes their goal to “start new dialogues about trans-inclusion and identity” and invite festival goers to their camp just across the street. These documents offer one of the few available histories of Camp Trans organizing. Along with other zines created by the queer and trans community, they are the subject of a growing number of private and public archives.

The cover art and schedule included in the 2001 Camp Trans zine.
The cover art and schedule included in the 2001 Camp Trans zine. Queer Zine Archive Project

Zines have existed for over 100 years—from the “little magazines” that Black writers created and distributed during the Harlem Renaissance to the fan-created, self-published comics of the 1930s where modern zines get their name. The second- and third-wave feminist movements, including the ones responsible for the Michigan Womyn’s Music Festival, used zines to organize protests and community action.

Defined often by a limited run or circulation of 1,000 or fewer copies, zines are created by collaging together written word, printed images, and drawings to create a small book that is then photocopied and distributed. As a result, each one represents a time capsule of community existence and culture. From a 1991 Riot Grrrl zine held in the D.C. Punk Archive, to A queer and trans fat activist timeline created in 2010 and held in the London College of Communication Zine Collection, they capture the struggles and victories of community building.

These handmade publications have found their way into the special collections and libraries of Duke University, New York University, Columbia University, Michigan State University, and more. Along with academic archives, there are countless independent collections like the Papercut Zine Library in Boston and Zine Archive Publishing Project in Seattle, which inspired Milo Miller and Christopher Wilde to create the Queer Zine Archive Project (QZAP) in 2003. Today it is one of the largest digital repositories of queer zines anywhere.

Inside the Papercut Zine Library's former location in Cambridge, Massachusetts, circa 2006.
Inside the Papercut Zine Library’s former location in Cambridge, Massachusetts, circa 2006. Cory Doctorow / CC BY-SA 2.0

Long before any of these official collections were built, private collectors were compiling archives in their homes. One of these people was Larry-bob Roberts, who created the zines Holy Titclamps and Queer Zine Explosion, a compendium of all the queer zines that people had sent their way. Larry-bob’s archives served as a vital reference for Miller and other QZAP research fellows as they studied zine culture over the past 50 years.

David Evans Frantz, a queer curator based in Los Angeles, says that private collections are often more common for queer and trans histories. “Before museums would even consider collecting or we could even imagine our lives highlighted in museums,” Frantz says, “much of that history saving is done through grassroots archives and libraries, the people that are collecting voraciously in their apartments.” They were the people who chose to collect the objects and documents that make up the histories that were not deemed acceptable or not noteworthy enough for museum spaces.

For years, archives and museums resisted collecting zines for this very reason. “With zines, everyone can make a copy,” says Vee Lawson, a writing professor at San Jose State University, “so you might have multiple variants of a zine that have been photocopied over time, held in different collections.”





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