This article draws on material from the riot grrrl archives at New York University's Fayles Library to examine the culture of 'zine' production in US riot grrrl communities during the 1990s. After investigating the relationship between the political issues and aesthetic strategies explored by riot grrrl literary producers, I analyse the points of tension arising within the movement which become illuminated by zines' revelatory confessional modes, or what Mimi Thi Nguyen has called riot grrrl's 'aesthetics of access'. I subsequently enquire after the implications for riot grrrl politics of understanding experiences of oppression and transgressive behaviour as cultural commodities. Finally, I go on to trace the commodification of the transgressive feminist gesture in mainstream popular culture and contemporary US online feminist activism. Biographical information Emily Spiers is a Research Associate at the Department of European Languages and Cultures at Lancaster University. Her doctoral thesis explored modes of popular contemporary feminist writing in the US, Britain and Germany. She is currently researching feminist literary activism in relation to spoken-word poetry.
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