Difference between revisions of "Sydney Samizdat"

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[[Image:chapbook.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Issue #1 ''Sydney Samizdat'' chapbook]]
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[[Image:chapbook.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Issue #1 ''Sydney Samizdat'' chapbook]]
  
'''Sydney Samizdat''' (2009-) is an underground arts zine edited by writer '''Matthew Asprey''' in the Inner West of Sydney, Australia.
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'''Sydney Samizdat''' (2009-) is an underground arts [[zine]] edited by writer [[Matthew Asprey]] in the Inner West of Sydney, Australia.
  
 
The title is a tribute to the courageous underground presses of the Soviet bloc and a comment on the Australian Government's increasingly repressive censorship stance. In the tradition of samizdat publications, the reader is asked to pass the package to a new reader after 72 hours.  
 
The title is a tribute to the courageous underground presses of the Soviet bloc and a comment on the Australian Government's increasingly repressive censorship stance. In the tradition of samizdat publications, the reader is asked to pass the package to a new reader after 72 hours.  
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*[http://www.matthewasprey.com www.matthewasprey.com]
 
*[http://www.matthewasprey.com www.matthewasprey.com]
  
[[Category:Zine]] [[Category:Zines from Australia]] [[Category:New South Wales Zines]] [[Category:2000's publications]]
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[[Category:Zine]]  
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[[Category:Zines from Australia]]  
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[[Category:New South Wales Zines]]  
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[[Category:2000's publications]]
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[[Category:Multi Media]]

Revision as of 18:01, 22 February 2010

Issue #1 Sydney Samizdat chapbook

Sydney Samizdat (2009-) is an underground arts zine edited by writer Matthew Asprey in the Inner West of Sydney, Australia.

The title is a tribute to the courageous underground presses of the Soviet bloc and a comment on the Australian Government's increasingly repressive censorship stance. In the tradition of samizdat publications, the reader is asked to pass the package to a new reader after 72 hours.

So far one issue has been produced in a limited edition. The theme of Issue #1 was ‘The Pleasures of Transgression’. The zine package contained a 48-page chapbook and a DVD-R. The chapbook was devoted to Matthew Asprey's long story 'Red Hills of Africa', set in Madrid and Marrakech. The DVD-R featured a 28-minute Australian film called Michael and Michelle (2009) written and directed by Matt Dibbayawan and starring Stephen Peacocke and Bianca Bradey. You also scored a music video featuring a track from Sydney jazz band Trio Apoplectic’s recent album Sofia (Rufus, 2009).

Copies were distributed freely around Sydney's Newtown and also in the Mission District of San Francisco.

External Links