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Revolutions in Text and Technology: Zines

This guide, created by zine librarian Jenna Freedman, supports Sue Mendelsohn's English course at Columbia University in the summer of 2023.

Make a Zine

Zine Making

Today we're making one-page zines. The layout may mess with your head. That's okay; breaking your brain while making a quarter size zine is a rite of passage!

photo of brown hands folding a zine

Suggested Themes

  • A communication medium you love or hate, e.g., Elon Musk's Twitter or Risograph printing
  • Letters to people who inspire(d) you
  • Your manifesto

Zine Pages

Cover (p1)

Selfie or brain map
 

Inside cover (p2)

  • Introduce your zine (pro-tip: you might want to do this at the end, so you know what you're introducing)
  • Metadata: contextualize for the reader
    • Author
    • Date
    • Publication location
    • Contact information
  • Freedoms and restrictions
    • Do you want to claim copyright?
    • Assign a CC license?
    • Reject copyright?
    • Control digital reproduction?
  • The required or repetitive stuff, like the honor code: consider using a QR code

Page 3

Rant, manifesto, I statements poem

Page 4 (left side of centerfold)

Cartoon, sketch, art, doodles (be bold! draw stick figures!)

Page 5 (right side of centerfold)

Up to you!

Page 6

Pencil game: maze, crossword puzzle, word finder, quiz, survey, matching

Page 7

Recipe (could be literally about food, or it could be "steps to dismantling whiteness.")

Back Cover

Credits, playlist, reviews or recommendations

Another pro-tip: number your pages. This will help when you are assembling your zines.

Zine Elements

photo of a hand drawing, with a white cat on the table definitely not interferingGenre

personal * political * art * literary * split * compilation * minicomics * DIY

Pro Tips

  • Leave a 1/4" margin around your pages
  • Remember your zine will be copied or scanned, so light text and images may not reproduce well
  • You do you

Your Zine in the Zine Library