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Zining Inclusively

Date
Date
Tuesday 19 January 2016

Join us to make a zine (a DIY publishing practice) and through this to explore how we might do, think and feel ‘inclusion’.

A key concern of the Centre for Critical Studies in Museums, Galleries and Heritage ‘Status of Inclusion’ research theme is to be attentive to the ways in which inclusion and exclusion happen through lived and felt interactions, always entangled with the social, material and institutional practices and forms of art galleries, museums and heritage.

In this workshop, we are interested in using a specific form – zining making - and using the process of us working collaboratively to create a zine to ‘do’ inclusion with each other. Through this experiential and making method we will generate specific reflections and interventions which will feed back into our research theme.

We will explore the ways in which zine making is a practice that relies on both inclusions and exclusions. Zines operate with inclusive ideas of production in the sense that anyone can make a zine, zining requires no institutional support and take no prescribed form. At the same time, zining also deliberately plays with exclusions. Zines are not produced for 'the public' or a general audience and instead tend to be developed with a defined and particular audience in mind.

Therefore zines stand as a crucial counterpoint to the tradition of art galleries and museums as spaces for institutionally-managed engagement with people abstractly defined as visitors or publics or the more recent traditions of identifying specific underrepresented audiences via demographics in order to actively develop programmes of 'inclusion'.

Zining Inclusively will be a practice-led workshop and we invite participants to bring along work and research-related materials such as images, photos, artworks, quotes, words, policy documents, statistics and correspondence.  During the workshop participants will rework these materials, creating new ways of collaging and creating new connections and, by the end of the day, produce together a group zine which we will publish.

A zine made by Jade French with self-advocates with learning disabilities as part of her PhDMore on zines!

Zines (pronounced 'zeens') are self-published, low-budget, non-profit DIY print publications.  There are no hard and fast rules to what a zine should look like, but they mostly are photocopied or uniquely printed booklets, stapled or bound in a creative way, featuring text (typed or handwritten) and images (photos, cut and paste, drawings).  As well as looking very different to the average publication, the content and subject of zines also varies hugely.  They can be filled with diatribes, reworking of pop culture iconography such as art, sport, gaming, television and 'all variety of personal and political narratives' (Piepmeier, 2008, p.214). Once created, zines are distributed in various ways. Sometimes zines are created and distributed with a small niche community of existing friends and other zinesters, other times they circulate in and beyond their original communities and can be traded or sold via zine distributors (known as distros), at zine fairs, record shops and also found in community spaces such as libraries. With no regular copy schedule, subscription list, international book numbers, or professional print jobs, most cut-and-paste zines circulate through informal distribution networks, which highlights not just the materiality of the object, but also of its engagement. In short zines challenge notions of what knowing might be and who might be the peers which determine its legitimacy.

The venue for the workshop is the Old Mining Building (Student Common Room).

If you would like to sign up or ask any further questions contact the organizers, Jade French, Carley Stubbs and Helen Graham:

Jade French: fhjf@leeds.ac.uk
Carley Stubbs: fhces@leeds.ac.uk
Helen Graham: h.graham@leeds.ac.uk

The Zining Inclusively workshop is happening as part of the Centre for Critical Studies in Museums, Galleries and Heritage 'Status of Inclusion' research theme.

Image: A zine made by Jade French with self-advocates with learning disabilities as part of her PhD