Difference between revisions of "Fight Boredom Distro"
Elevatorlady (talk | contribs) |
m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
[[Image:164030 166365846741409 115411965170131 391690 7358597 n.jpg|200px|thumb|right|]] | [[Image:164030 166365846741409 115411965170131 391690 7358597 n.jpg|200px|thumb|right|]] | ||
− | '''Fight Boredom Distro''' is run out of [[Québec]], Canada, by zinester [[Amber Dearest]]. | + | '''Fight Boredom Distro''' is run out of Montréal, [[Québec]], Canada, by zinester [[Amber Dearest]]. |
− | + | Distributing zines by queers, feminists, anarchists, witches, and weirdos. From the [http://fight-boredom.com/submission-guidelines/ Submission Guidelines]: What I’m looking for: Zines, perzines, and comics on addictions, recovery, & sobriety; creating & critiquing community; femme identity; mental health, disabilities, & illnesses; bodies; sex and/or sex work; self-care; friendship; intersections of race, class, and gender; and okay, unicorns and karaoke. I’ve also got a soft spot for small-town queers and high school dropouts, good storytelling and sweet aesthetics. Your zine does not need to be explicitly political, but I’d still like to know about who you are and where you’re coming from. You can take a look at the catalogue for examples of the kinda zines I’m into. | |
+ | |||
+ | What I’m not looking for: Feminism 101; riot grrrl; white cis boy problems; oppressive language; zines that retail for more than five dollars (but one-two-three dollars is even better); form letters; illegible handwriting. | ||
== External Link == | == External Link == |
Revision as of 18:08, 29 November 2015
Fight Boredom Distro is run out of Montréal, Québec, Canada, by zinester Amber Dearest.
Distributing zines by queers, feminists, anarchists, witches, and weirdos. From the Submission Guidelines: What I’m looking for: Zines, perzines, and comics on addictions, recovery, & sobriety; creating & critiquing community; femme identity; mental health, disabilities, & illnesses; bodies; sex and/or sex work; self-care; friendship; intersections of race, class, and gender; and okay, unicorns and karaoke. I’ve also got a soft spot for small-town queers and high school dropouts, good storytelling and sweet aesthetics. Your zine does not need to be explicitly political, but I’d still like to know about who you are and where you’re coming from. You can take a look at the catalogue for examples of the kinda zines I’m into.
What I’m not looking for: Feminism 101; riot grrrl; white cis boy problems; oppressive language; zines that retail for more than five dollars (but one-two-three dollars is even better); form letters; illegible handwriting.