Against the grain

Finding meaning in punk

Featured in

  • Published 20240507
  • ISBN: 978-1-922212-95-5
  • Extent: 203pp
  • Paperback, ePub, PDF, Kindle compatible

SHE CROSSED MY path one afternoon in 1995. I was sitting at a bus stop on Elizabeth Street in Meanjin/Brisbane, wearing glittery fishnet stockings, Dr Martens boots, a leopard-­print skirt, a studded spiky collar and a shirt that read ‘Pretty Vacant’. She rolled past me on her skateboard. I’d often seen her at gigs – she embodied the spirit Kathleen Hanna sang about in Bikini Kill’s ‘Rebel Girl’. She was a punk I admired.

She gave a friendly wave and U-­turned to sit down beside me. Reaching into her backpack, she produced a crumpled photocopied booklet. ‘What’s this?’ I asked, taking it from her. ‘Something I made,’ she replied, grinning. ‘A zine.’ The rumble of the arriving bus interrupted before I could ask any more questions. We exchanged goodbyes.

Already a subscriber? Sign in here

If you are an educator or student wishing to access content for study purposes please contact us at griffithreview@griffith.edu.au

Share article

About the author

Bianca Valentino

Bianca Valentino is a writer, book editor and underground magazine publisher. She got her start making punk fanzines in the ’90s and has written...

More from this edition

picker

Poetry light’s tacked to the window i  want it to pick at me eat  me like fairy floss or a scab you  say it’s sexual frustration i  pick at...

Fraser Gehrig after a dirty bump

Poetry Under floodlight he is beautiful a jacked and tanned bench presser who in preparation small stepped  on buffalo grass to hear the sweet  smack of timing. Ripping the...

Lincoln Wimbley writes a story at 37,000 feet

FictionThen last week, in that bar. Lincoln never a big bar guy. But Professor Tim suggested, ‘Get out in the world!’ Somewhere all new. So, a bar. The bartender asked, ‘A beer?’ Lincoln hated cans. Hated bottles. Hated beer. But asked for something on draft. On tap. Explained why he was there, a first-­timer, hunting for a story. Bartender laughed. Said elsewhere’s probably best. ‘None of the sad sacks here come with a happy ending.’

Stay up to date with the latest, news, articles and special offers from Griffith Review.