
Queercore
Description
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Queercore officially got its name in the mid-1980s when G.B. Jones and Bruce LaBruce named it in their revolutionary zine J.D.s, but the movement began years earlier with bands like Wayne County and the Electric Chairs, Nervous Gender, and Fifth Column. The scene exploded into the next decade with the popularity of bands that often crossed over into the riot grrrl scene, including Tribe 8, Team Dresch, Sister George, and Huggy Bear. Their revolution took the form of zine and cassette creation, which they distributed far and wide. Those documents became like guidebooks for queer punks in small towns throughout North America, Europe, Australia, and Japan.
This book explores queercore as a genre that was never intended to be a genre, but instead an underground resistance movement centered around punk. It identifies the key players in the queercore lexicon, from musicians and filmmakers to record labels and zine-makers, and it documents their histories through original interviews and archival research. Ultimately, the book guides readers through the beginnings of queercore into the present, where the legacy of this unlikely genre looms loudly for LGBTQIA+ artists and all those marginalized by the mainstream.
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Content
1. Zines
2. Queercore in Context
3. Defining Queer(core)
4. Queercore Bands
5. The Sound of Queercore
6. Queercore Spy Work: Reclaiming Queercoding
7. Record Labels to the Rescue
8. Queercore Happenings
9. Queercore on Screen
10. Moving Mainstream
11. Post-Queercore?
12. Queering the Archive
Ten Essential Tracks
Acknowledgements
Works Cited
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