AN ABSOLUTE TRIUMPH OF PUNK SCHOLARSHIP AND ALTERNATIVE HISTORIOGRAPHY
~ Jim Donaghey ~
Reading through this richly detailed overview of punk zines from the late 1970s
and the 1980s, you can feel the effort that Matt Worley has poured into this. I
imagine him elbow deep in piles of fading black-and-white missives, delving into
their innards to discover themes, connections and discordances. Mention is made
of hundreds upon hundreds of zines – and, unlike many books about fanzines,
Worley gets beyond the front cover pages to actually provide a sense of the
messy complexity of a dozen years of countercultural media.
Zerox Machine takes a chronological approach, zooming out at key moments to
offer wider context, especially with regard to the print industry at large, then
zooming in for a closely detailed look at particular zines that illustrate an
essential point. Combined with an embrace of all variety of zines, and myriad
associated punk sub-genres and political preferences, the approach is very
effective – meticulously detailed without losing grasp of the broader sweep of
(counter-)cultural transformations.
In a refreshing distinction from other punk history books, Worley is explicit
from the outset that the end point of this book actually presages a huge
upswelling of punk zine production into the 1990s and beyond (chiefly driven by
riot grrrl). Arguably, the hazily drawn finishing point makes sense in terms of
evolving production technologies – the book charts the shift from reliance on
professional offset printers to the office photocopy machine (and nods to all
sorts of other idiosyncratic devices such as Gestetners), closing off before the
advent of the home computer and the retrenchment of DIY production. The ending
of the book feels a bit abrupt as a result, but, as Worley puts it, punk zine
production is “a story that never ends” (p. 310), with each successive
generation and iteration ‘sowing seeds’ for the next blossoming of DIY culture.
Other punk historians should take note: the subject matter doesn’t stop just
because one book does!
The geographical focus is on Britain (or, more accurately, the UK, with the
inclusion of numerous zines from the north of Ireland). MaximumRockNRoll’s
emergence in 1982 in the US gets a nod here and there, and the ‘rest of the
world’ is present in the scene reports, interviews and reviews covering places
like New Zealand, West Germany, Belgium, and, with recurring prominence,
Yugoslavia. Within the confines of the UK though, the geographical spread is
impressive – lists of zines from absolutely everywhere, from tiny villages to
the big urban centres – and Worley celebrates the London-sceptic localism that
pervades many of these regional zines.
Worley’s close attention to detail is impressive. It’s long been a bugbear of
his that Dick Hebdige misattributed the ‘here’s a chord, here’s another, now
start a band’ memetic image to Sniffin’ Glue instead of Sideburns, and never
bothered to correct it. In that vein, one teensy error worth correcting here is
the mis-location of Just Books anarchist bookshop in Belfast, which has been
repeated from Fearghus Roulston’s error-strewn book about punk in Northern
Ireland. For the record, it was on Winetavern Street! Elsewhere, the veracity of
Worley’s analyses is not in doubt. The huge quantity and variety of zines that
Worley takes as source material is impressive, and he augments his reading by
actually speaking with many of the zine producers themselves. The reflections of
zinesters some 40 or 50 years later is really enriching. With all the expected
shrugging off of youthful naïveté, most recollect their activities
as urgent and essential and important. Worley’s research is respectful of that
energy, while weaving a critical and alternative history from their pages.
Anarchism is a recurring theme, as you might expect, making itself evident in
scrawled circle-As, countless interviews with Crass and Poison Girls, as well as
more thoroughgoing engagements with anarchist political philosophy. But Worley
doesn’t shy away from the messiness of punk politics, which is well-evidenced in
zine production. He notes those with links to the National Front and British
Movement, avowedly ‘non-political’ zinesters, along with the avant-garde and
outré artsy efforts. The book also takes in the emerging football zine culture
and those associated with indie rock (back when ‘indie’ meant independent).
Worley has never been one to attach a false coherence to punk politics, but he’s
clear that punk zines are politically important, and that ultimately, “a
fanzine’s politics remained best expressed through praxis” (p. 217). Praxis, by
the way, means the interplay between theory and practice, where one informs the
other without devolving into two separate activities. Zines, perhaps far more
than song lyrics or poster graphics, have the capacity to express that
‘praxical’ politics. Do It Yourself initiative, creativity and networking all
animate the life of punk zines. The fact of their publication is political
in-and-of-itself, and this interweaves with the ‘theory’ splashed haphazardly
across their pages.
There is a lot to learn from reading this thoroughly researched tome. Worley’s
immersion in the punk zine culture of this period stands as an excellent example
of doing history from below – this should become the go-to book for anyone who
wants to know.
Matthew Worley (2024), Zerox Machine. Punk, post-punk and fanzines in Britain
1976-88, London: Reaktion Books, 360pp.
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