BLOG POST IN PROGRESS
Since a lot of the zines cataloged today are from the Feminist Zine Fest again, here's a photo of the other organizer and me.
Photo by Ayelet Pearl: Rachel Casiano-Hernandez, Jordan Alam, Sari Ardcarran, Jenna Freedman and Elvis Bakaitis
Purchased, Donated or Traded for at the NYC Feminist Zine Fest
All-Inclusive for the Spoiled Rotten by a Calhoun School student, 2013?
The Bedroom Wall by Sophia B 2013?
The Bracero Program by Ashley Wright, 2013?
Effy by a Calhoun School student, 2013?
Encuentro by Slim Lopéz, 2012
A Guide to New York by Charlotte Tegen
The History of China by Kimberly Katz,
Homecoming by Nicole Acosta, 2013
"To be a woman of color in the United States is be born with a tapeworm. Any love and confidence we develop is sucked immediately out of us. It is used to feed parasites. It redirects our energies."
and
"By leaving a written record of our thunderous hearts and voices, we are creating something tangible--something that has travelled, that connects us across decades and oceans. It is in these connections, trapped in the curves of our script, in a map across pages that we are able to give voice to love."
Independence Movements in Angola by Kyler Murria Castro and Jeremy Quezada
Live Well Laugh Often Love Much by Alyana Cato, 2013
Luxe by Anwen Herbert-Lewis,
Qing China by Leah Saberski, 2014
Riot Grrrl Problems & Other Feminist Cliches by Suzy X, 2011
Some People Have Two Daddies by Kim Katz
Stonewall 1969 by Mike Funk
View the whole zine on Buzzfeed.
Words of Widsom for a Teenage Girl by Sabrina , 2013
New-to-Us Library of Congress Subject Headings
Angola--History--Revolution, 1961-1975.
Calhoun School--Students.
Characters and characteristics on television--Appreciation. (Because there's no LCSH yet for Skins or Effy Stonem.)
Dominican Americans--Race identity.
Girls' bedrooms.
Poverty.
Seasonal Farm Laborers Program.
Wealth.