Box 28
Contains 29 Results:
Leaders in Black History, Book Arts Program at the J. Willard Marriott Library, 2017
The Marriott Library zine collection (1990-2018) contains zines and zine related materials such as buttons, stickers, and postcards that are made predominantly by women, non-binary, and LGBTQ+ authors as well as people of color and religious minorities in the United States. Some of the zines in the collection are from Salt Lake City, Utah generally and from students at the University of Utah specifically.
The Little Book of Big Black Bears: Plus, the Black Teddy Bears' Picnic, Ajuan Mance, 2016
The Little Book of Big Black bears is a zine illustrated by Ajuan Mance. The first half is a tribute to Black gay bears. The second half is a rewrite of Jimmy Kennedy's "Teddy Bear's Picnic." This 28-page zine includes drawings and text.
Published in Oakland, California.
The Little Things: an Art/Perzine on Mental Health and Self Care, Lillian Cuda, 2016
Zine provides a list of activities that can be done when someone is not having a good day.
Long Division, Joyana McDiarmid, 2015
This zine is a comic about when the character Elena was confronted with an identity crisis and an incomplete diagnosis and how she has to find who she is in the wreckage of life.
This folder contains part 1, 2, 3 and 4. Published in Morrisville, North Carolina and all issues are in English.
Love Me, Love My Belly: a Body Image Zine, 2014-2015
Zine dedicated to the acceptance of self and imperfection as beauty. It's about the space between us, our differences, our scars, our wobbly bits, and our power as it relates to the bodies we live in.
Published in Cincinnati, Ohio, issue 1 and 2.
Moments of Struggle: an Illustrated Introduction to Some Anarchist History, Morgenmuffel production, 2009
Monster, Hexgf
This zine includes doodles, haikus, comics, and pieces about varied subjects including math, mental health, drugs, piercings, sex/relationships, polyamory, coming out, gender diversity in STEM and feminism.
This folder contains volume 3.
Morgenmuffel, Isy, 2007
This zine by Isy, a Korean-German anarchist living in England, is a compilation of comics and autobiographical writing.
Number 16, published in Brighton, England, and in English.
MPD for You and Me: Multiple Personality Comic Book, LB Lee
This folder contains five copies and is in English.
Muchacha #9: Body Positivity, Daisy Salinas, 2014
Daisy, a Mexican-American feminist based in Tennessee, writes about body positivity, diversity and racism.
Published in Nashville, Tennessee, 8 unnumbered pages and in English.
Murder Can Be Fun, John Marr, 1990, 1996-1997, 2004, 2007
Published irregularly, the zine reveals unpleasant, unhealthy and violent side of life. Each issue is filled with bizarre deaths, true crime, and disasters.
This folder contains number 12, 17, 18, 19 and 20. Published in San Francisco, California, and all issues are in English.
My Complicated Relationship with Food: Reviews of Some of the Things We Put in Our Mouths, Zach
Zach shares reviews of different categories of food, explaining why he thinks many common foods are weird or gross.
This folder contains volumes 1, 2, and 3, and is in English.
Neither Doll Houses Nor Tree Houses: on Living Outside of the Gender Binary, Sari, 2012
This zine is divided up into three distinct parts in which the author explores their own lifelong relationship with gender. Topics include balancing masculinity and femininity as a teenager, accessibility of queer jargon and language, and coming out as gender variant/trans.
No Better Than Apples, Kate Larson, 2014
In issue 9, Kate writes about the numbness and pain that was eventually diagnosed as multiple sclerosis. Uninsured, she also addresses how her community assisted her during her multiple doctor visits, MRI scans, and her fear, anger and sadness about the possibility of becoming paralyzed.
This folder contains issue 9 and 10. Published in New Paltz, New York.
No Gods. No Dungeon Masters, words by Ion O'Clast, art by Rachel Dukes, cover by Andy Warner, 2014
Agender zinester Ion O'Clast and comic artist Rachel Dukes collaborate to make this Dungeons and Dragons themed comic, in which the main character struggles to reconcile their identities within queer anarchism and the "realm of nerd bullshit." The comic is printed in black and white, and features a giant Dungeons and Dragons die crushing a police car.
Published in Los Angeles, California, 8 unnumbered pages and in English.
No One Gives a Fuck About Your Shitty Band!, Richard Visick, 2003, 2006
Published in Seattle, Washington. The folder includes volume 1 and 2.
OCD, Hillary Gingerich, 2014
A 24-page zine about OCD by someone with OCD. Includes a general overview for people without OCD as well as lots of stories and original drawings about her own personal experience with OCD.
Published in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Pajubá: the Language of Brazilian Travestis, text and illustrations by Eloisa Aquino, 2014
Pajubá - The Language of Brazilian Travestis is a zine that mixes art and linguistics! Learn about the secret language of Brazilian travestis, one that demands not only a knowledge of the African language Yoruba mixed with Portuguese, but also a command of a complex set of performative gestures to go with it.- from B & D Press.
Published in Montreal, Canada.
Phases of the Moon, Stacey Marie and Alexander, 2007, 2010
Issue 3 titled, "take yr bones apart & put them back together." Issue 4 titled, "What Matters Most is How Well You Walk Through the Fire."
This folder contains number 3 and 4. Published in Athens, Georgia.
Picking Bones, Keet Geniza, 2015-2016
This perzine by queer Filipina Canadian illustrator Keet Geniza, is a zine with a mix of prose and comics of various topics such as Mercury retrograde, diaspora blues, flippant spellcasting, growing into self-love, visiting family in New York and the Philippines, reuniting with old friends, managing grief, homesickness and places and past selves.
In English and includes two copies of Volume 0, Volume 1, postcard and a print titled, "Resist."