Difference between revisions of "Noemi Martinez"

From ZineWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
(deleting non-applicable categories)
 
(2 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[Image:Noemi.jpg|frame|Noemi Martinez]]
 
[[Image:Noemi.jpg|frame|Noemi Martinez]]
  
'''Noemi Martinez''' is a zinester, zine editor, writer, poet and indie press publisher who lives in Weslaco, Texas. She has been involved in alternative forms of media since the late 90s. A single mother, her zines address issues of racism from a Chicana/Puerto Rican perspective, racism, white privilege, immigration, poverty, displacement and identity. In 2014 she started a small indie press, [http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press], with roots in DIY that focuses on the work of women and people of color. She has organized poetry events and zine events, including the first RGV ZineFest in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Grande_Valley Rio Grande Valley] and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, and poets with discussions and workshops that were led by women and women of color.  
+
'''Noemi Martinez''' is a [[zinester]], zine [[editor]], [[writer]], [[poet]] and indie press [[publisher]] who lives in Weslaco, Texas. She has been involved in alternative forms of media since the late 90s. A single mother, her zines address issues of [[racism]] from a Chicana/Puerto Rican perspective, racism, white privilege, immigration, poverty, displacement and identity. In 2014 she started a small indie press, [http://www.hermanaresistpress.com Hermana Resist Press], with roots in [[DIY]] that focuses on the work of women and people of color. She has organized poetry events and zine events, including the first RGV ZineFest in the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rio_Grande_Valley Rio Grande Valley] and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, and poets with discussions and workshops that were led by women and women of color.  
  
 
Born in Chicago, Illinois, Martinez moved to Edcouch, Texas when she was 9 with frequent trips and summers spent in Cerralvo, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Moving to other small cities in the Rio Grande Valley, Martinez was living in La Blanca, Texas when she found [[Pander Zine Distro]] online. The first zine she ordered and read was [[Taryn Hipp]]'s [[Girl Swirl]]. She sought other women of color zinesters and found other women of color zinesters via Bianca who wrote [[Mamasita]], among other zines. She then found a number of zines by people of color that included [[Pure Tuna Fish]], [[Hard as Nails]], [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Quantify]], [[Framing Historica Theft]] and [[Casa de los Trucos]]. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez produced her first zine, [[Making of a Chicana]].  
 
Born in Chicago, Illinois, Martinez moved to Edcouch, Texas when she was 9 with frequent trips and summers spent in Cerralvo, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Moving to other small cities in the Rio Grande Valley, Martinez was living in La Blanca, Texas when she found [[Pander Zine Distro]] online. The first zine she ordered and read was [[Taryn Hipp]]'s [[Girl Swirl]]. She sought other women of color zinesters and found other women of color zinesters via Bianca who wrote [[Mamasita]], among other zines. She then found a number of zines by people of color that included [[Pure Tuna Fish]], [[Hard as Nails]], [[Bamboo Girl]], [[Quantify]], [[Framing Historica Theft]] and [[Casa de los Trucos]]. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez produced her first zine, [[Making of a Chicana]].  
  
She is also the creator of the [[POC_Zinesters]] community at Livejournal. She was the owner of [[C/s distro]], which stocked and distributed zines by women and people of color.  
+
She is also the creator of the [[POC_Zinesters]] community at Livejournal. She was the owner of [[C/s distro]], which stocked and distributed zines by women and [[people of color]].  
  
 
==Zines==
 
==Zines==
* [[Hermana, Resist]] (six issues)
+
*[[Hermana, Resist]] (six issues)
 
*[[Aged Noise]]
 
*[[Aged Noise]]
 
*[[Homespun Zine: DIY]] three issues
 
*[[Homespun Zine: DIY]] three issues
Line 68: Line 68:
 
[[Category:Zinester|Martinez]]
 
[[Category:Zinester|Martinez]]
 
[[Category:POC Zinester|Martinez]]
 
[[Category:POC Zinester|Martinez]]
[[Category:Texas Zinesters]]
+
[[Category:Texas Zinesters|Martinez]]
[[Category: Zine Book]]
+
[[Category:Poet|Martinez]]
[[Category: chronic pain]]
+
[[Category:Feminism|Martinez]]
[[Category: WOC Zines]]
 

Latest revision as of 00:30, 30 November 2015

Noemi Martinez

Noemi Martinez is a zinester, zine editor, writer, poet and indie press publisher who lives in Weslaco, Texas. She has been involved in alternative forms of media since the late 90s. A single mother, her zines address issues of racism from a Chicana/Puerto Rican perspective, racism, white privilege, immigration, poverty, displacement and identity. In 2014 she started a small indie press, Hermana Resist Press, with roots in DIY that focuses on the work of women and people of color. She has organized poetry events and zine events, including the first RGV ZineFest in the Rio Grande Valley and Mujerfest, a festival that ran for several years in the RGV that showcased women and women of color musicians, artists, artisans, and poets with discussions and workshops that were led by women and women of color.

Born in Chicago, Illinois, Martinez moved to Edcouch, Texas when she was 9 with frequent trips and summers spent in Cerralvo, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. Moving to other small cities in the Rio Grande Valley, Martinez was living in La Blanca, Texas when she found Pander Zine Distro online. The first zine she ordered and read was Taryn Hipp's Girl Swirl. She sought other women of color zinesters and found other women of color zinesters via Bianca who wrote Mamasita, among other zines. She then found a number of zines by people of color that included Pure Tuna Fish, Hard as Nails, Bamboo Girl, Quantify, Framing Historica Theft and Casa de los Trucos. Inspired by these and noting the lack of zines by women of color, specifically zines by Chicanas, Martinez produced her first zine, Making of a Chicana.

She is also the creator of the POC_Zinesters community at Livejournal. She was the owner of C/s distro, which stocked and distributed zines by women and people of color.

Zines


Editor

Contributions

Featured Zinester

Zine Collection

In 2015, a collection of Hermana, Resist zines will be published by the small press Sweet Candy Press.

Zines in the Community

Other Involvement

  • Speak! Media, SPEAK Women of Color Media Collective, a fundraiser for single mothers of color to attend the Allied Media Conference. The group independently produced a zine, spoken word cd and teaching template. Speak! Media
  • advisory panel for the first kids track at the Allied Media Conference
  • Women of Color Zines presentation, Allied Media Conference, 2007
  • Speak! Radical Women of Color CD

Honors

  • In the summer of 2014, Martinez was awarded the media maker single mother of color grant of awesomeness award by Kids City Baltimore

External Links