1990s Zine Distribution and Understanding the Work of Zine Distros through Their Catalogs

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Date

2024-09

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University of Chicago Press

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Abstract

During the 1990s zine distros—small scale, DIY distributors—emerged to become a vital part of zine communities by attempting to address the lack of established distribution channels, championing the medium, and fostering community. Before distros moved online in the 2000s, some produced paper catalogs to market and sell the zines they carried. These publications are complex documents that offer important information about zine distribution and culture unavailable elsewhere. This article considers the function of zine distros and what their catalogs can tell us. The first section provides an overview of 1990s zine distribution and examines how and why distros emerged when they did, arguing that distros offered something unique and important among distribution methods: distribution overseen by those embedded in zine communities that afforded creators the opportunity to reach a wider but controlled audience within a framework that valued support, participation, and community building. Yet a close examination of distros also reveals some of the problems inherent in these volunteer-run projects. The latter portion of this article analyzes catalogs produced by several distros. Catalogs, although short lived, document an important window of time: the emergence of distros, their optimism and efforts, and the role they played in zine distribution and communities.

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zines, DIY, self-publishing, book history, ephemera, 1990s

Citation

Braun, Jolie. "1990s Zine Distribution and Understanding the Work of Zine Distros through Their Catalogs." The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, vol. 118 no. 3, 2024, p. 413-441. https://doi.org/10.1086/731777