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Riot grrrl

Riot grrrl is an underground feminist punk movement that began during the early 1990s within the United States in Olympia,[1] Washington[2] and the greater Pacific Northwest[3] and has expanded to at least 26 other countries.[4] A subcultural movement that combines feminism, punk music, and politics,[5] it is often associated with third-wave feminism, which is sometimes seen as having grown out of the riot grrrl movement and has recently been seen in fourth-wave feminist punk music that rose in the 2010s.[6] The genre has also been described as coming out of indie rock, with the punk scene serving as an inspiration for a movement in which women could express anger, rage, and frustration, emotions considered socially acceptable for male songwriters but less commonly for women.[7]

Riot grrrl
Stylistic origins
Musical
Ideological
Cultural originsEarly 1990s, Pacific Northwest and Olympia, Washington, US
Typical instruments
  • Electric guitar
  • vocals
  • bass
  • drums
  • keyboards
Regional scenes
Washington
Local scenes
Olympia, Washington, US
Other topics

Riot grrrl songs often addressed issues such as rape, domestic abuse, sexuality, racism, patriarchy, classism, anarchism, and female empowerment. Primary bands most associated with the movement by media include Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, Heavens to Betsy, Excuse 17, Slant 6, Emily's Sassy Lime, Huggy Bear, Jack Off Jill (later coining the term Riot Goth) and Skinned Teen.[1][8][9][10][11][12][3][13] Also included were queercore groups such as Team Dresch and the Third Sex.[1][14]

In addition to a unique music scene and genre, riot grrrl became a subculture involving a DIY ethic, zines, art, political action, and activism.[15] The movement quickly spread well beyond its musical roots to influence the vibrant zine- and Internet-based nature of fourth-wave feminism, complete with local meetings and grassroots organizing to end intersectional forms of prejudice and oppression, especially physical and emotional violence against all genders.[16] Riot grrrls are known to hold meetings, start chapters,[4] and support and organize women in music[17] as well as art created by transgender people, gay individuals, lesbians, and other communities.[14]

Origins edit

The riot grrrl movement originated in 1991, when a group of women from Olympia, Washington and Washington, D.C. held a meeting about sexism in their local punk scenes in the United States.[17] The word "girl" was intentionally used in order to focus on childhood, a time when children have the strongest self-esteem and belief in themselves.[18] Riot grrrls then took a growling "R", replacing the "I" in the word as a way to take back the derogatory use of the term.[19] Both double and triple "R" spellings are acceptable.[20]

The Seattle and Olympia, Washington music scenes in the Pacific Northwest had sophisticated do it yourself (DIY) infrastructure.[21] Women involved in local underground music scenes took advantage of this platform to articulate their feminist beliefs and desires by creating zines (short for "magazine").[22] While the model of politically-themed zines had already been used in punk culture as an alternative (to mainstream) culture, zines also followed a longer legacy of self-published feminist writing that allowed women to circulate ideas that would not otherwise be published.[22] At the time there was discomfort among many women in the music scene who felt that they had no space for organizing due to the exclusionary, male-dominated nature of punk culture at the time. Many women found that while they identified with the larger, music-oriented subculture of punk rock, they often had little to no voice in their local scenes. Women in the Washington punk scenes took it upon themselves to represent their own interests artistically through the new riot grrrl subculture.[23] To quote Liz Naylor, who would become the manager of English riot grrrl band Huggy Bear:[21]

There was a lot of anger and self-mutilation. In a symbolic sense, women were cutting and destroying the established image of femininity, aggressively tearing it down.

Riot grrrl bands were influenced by groundbreaking female punk and mainstream rock performers of the 1970s to the mid-1980s. While many of these musicians were not originally associated with each other during their time and came from a variety of backgrounds and styles, as a group they anticipated many of riot grrrl's musical and thematic attributes. These performers include The Slits, Poly Styrene, Siouxsie Sioux, The Raincoats, Joan Jett, Kim Gordon, and Kim Deal, among others.[21][9][10][17][24][25][26][27][28][29] Of Kim Gordon, in particular, Kathleen Hanna noted, "She was a forerunner, musically [...] Just knowing a woman was in a band trading lead vocals, playing bass, and being a visual artist at the same time made me feel less alone."[29] Riot grrrl musicians and musicians-to-be were also inspired by the 1982 U.S. musical drama movie Ladies and Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains, which tells the story of a (fictional) seemingly proto-riot grrrl band.[30]

Pacific Northwest and Washington, D.C. edit

Olympia, Washington had a strong feminist artistic and cultural legacy that influenced early riot grrrl. In the early 1980s, Stella Marrs, Dana Squires and Julie Fay co-founded the store Girl City, where they created art and performances.[31] The first K Records release in 1982 was a cassette of Heather Lewis' first band Supreme Cool Beings, while she was a student at The Evergreen State College, a year before she co-founded Beat Happening.[32] In 1985, The Go Team formed with then 15-year-old Tobi Vail. The band would go on to collaborate with Olympia scene musicians who are inherently linked to the riot grrrl movement: Donna Dresch, Lois Maffeo, and Billy "Boredom" Karren.[11][33] Karren was a rotating musician who played in the band, and it was there that he and Vail played together for the first time, later collaborating in several other bands which included Bikini Kill and The Frumpies. Maffeo hosted a women-centered radio show on Olympia's community radio station KAOS.[31][34][35] Candice Pedersen interned at K Records in 1986 while at The Evergreen State College, and became co-owner in 1989.[31][36][37]

In the 1980s, two articles on the topic of women in rock would be published by Puncture, a Portland, Oregon, zine edited by Katherine Spielmann and Patty Stirling.[38] Authored by Rough Trade employee Terri Sutton, these articles became what is considered by some to be titular writing on riot grrrl ethos.[39] One article, "Women, Sex, & Rock 'n' Roll" (1989) is considered particularly important as the manifesto of the riot grrrl movement.[40] Sutton would also say, in "Women In Rock: An Open Letter", written in 1988, "To me rock and roll is about lust, lust for feeling; the worst I can say about a band is they're boring. That's why it's so crucial that women get up onstage and impart--inspire some emotion."[41]

Meanwhile in the Washington, D.C. area, Beat Happening fan Erin Smith started her zine Teenage Gang Debs in 1987.[42] In 1988, two D.C. women that had been in all-women punk bands there previously – Chalk Circle's Sharon Cheslow and Fire Party's Amy Pickering – joined forces with Cynthia Connolly and Lydia Ely to organize group discussions focusing on gender differences and sexism in the D.C. punk community.[35][43] The results were published in the June 1988 issue of Maximum Rock 'n' Roll.[43] In November 1988, Connolly published the book Banned in DC: Photos and Anecdotes From the DC Punk Underground (79–85) through her small press Sun Dog Propaganda, and it was co-edited with Cheslow and Ely along with Leslie Clague.[35][42][44] These conversations and the book laid the groundwork for riot grrrl when members of Bikini Kill and Bratmobile later came to D.C. in 1991.[43] In fall 1989, Erin Smith visited Olympia and met Maffeo through Beat Happening's Calvin Johnson.[42] Johnson had been in The Go Team with Vail, and co-owned K Records with Candice Pedersen. At the end of 1989, Cheslow began publishing her zine Interrobang?! focusing on punk and sexism, and the first issue included an interview with Nation of Ulysses (NOU).[42] Vail saw a copy of this issue and was instantly captivated by NOU's aesthetic.[43]

Vail began publishing her zine Jigsaw in 1988, around the same time that Dresch started her zine Chainsaw.[42] Zines became a means of urgent expression; Laura Sister Nobody wrote in her zine Sister Nobody, "Us, we are women who know that something is happening – something that seems like a secret right now, but won't stay like a secret for much longer."[35] At the time, Vail was working at a sandwich shop with Kathi Wilcox who was impressed by Vail's interest in "girls in bands, specifically," including an aggressive emphasis on feminist issues.[45] Meanwhile, in 1989 Kathleen Hanna had co-founded the Olympia art collective/band Amy Carter and feminist gallery/music venue Reko Muse, both with Tammy Rae Carland and Heidi Arbogast.[34] By summer 1989, the space had hosted The Go Team, Babes in Toyland, and Nirvana.[34] Hanna also interned at SafePlace, an Olympia domestic violence shelter and provider of sexual assault/abuse services, for which she did counseling, gave presentations at local high schools, and started a discussion group for teenage girls.[34] Hanna came upon a copy of Jigsaw in 1989 and found resonance with Vail's writing.[42][46] Hanna began to contribute to the zine, submitting interviews to Jigsaw while on tour with Viva Knieval in 1990.[42][47] In Jigsaw, Vail wrote about "angry grrls", combining the word girls with a powerful growl.[22] Some issues of Jigsaw have been archived at Harvard University as a research resource along with other counterculture zines.[48] After touring for two months in summer 1990, Hanna's band Viva Knievel called it quits.[47] Hanna then began collaborating with Vail after attending a performance of The Go Team and recognizing Vail as the mastermind behind Jigsaw zine.[49] Dresch later started a record label under the name Chainsaw and formed the queercore band Team Dresch. In Chainsaw #2 she wrote, "Right now, maybe, Chainsaw is about Frustration. Frustration in music. Frustration in living, in being a girl, in being a homo, in being a misfit of any sort...Which is where this whole punk rock thing came from in the first place."[35]

Molly Neuman (from D.C.) and Allison Wolfe (from Olympia) met in fall 1989 while living next door to each other in dorms at the University of Oregon in Eugene, Oregon, and they traveled to Olympia on weekends.[42][50] They first read Vail's zine Jigsaw in January 1990, and around the same time met Hanna.[50] While on winter break 1990–91, Neuman returned to Washington, D.C., where her family lived and created the first issue of the zine Girl Germs.[37][42][50] Corin Tucker came up with the band name Heavens to Betsy in Eugene during the summer of 1990, and moved to Olympia that fall to attend The Evergreen State College.[42][51] Kathleen Hanna and her friends Tobi Vail and Kathi Wilcox, who were also studying at Evergreen, recruited Billy Karren to form Bikini Kill in fall 1990.[42] Neuman and Wolfe played their first show on Valentine's Day 1991 at the North Shore Surf Club in Olympia, after Johnson invited them to perform on a bill with Bikini Kill and Some Velvet Sidewalk.[42][50] While working on a documentary film about the Olympia music scene, Tucker went to this show and interviewed Neuman and Wolfe.[50] Hanna, Vail and Wilcox collaborated on a feminist zine titled Bikini Kill for their first tours in 1991.[49][52] The Riot Grrrl movement believed in girls actively engaging in cultural production, creating their own music and fanzines rather than following existing materials. The bands associated with Riot Grrrl used their music to express feminist and anti-racist viewpoints. Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, and Heavens to Betsy created songs with extremely personal lyrics that dealt with topics such as rape, incest and eating disorders.[53][54]

Jenny Toomey and Hanna had known each other as young teens while attending the same D.C. area junior high school.[55] Toomey co-founded the indie rock label Simple Machines with Kristin Thomson in early 1990, and they ran the label out of a punk group house in Arlington, Virginia. They shared the house with Positive Force activists before moving into their own group house in Arlington.[56] Toomey visited Olympia during fall 1990, where she formed My New Boyfriend with Tobi Vail, Aaron Stauffer from Seaweed, and Christina Calle.[57] Upon returning to Arlington, Toomey and Thomson formed the indie rock band Tsunami.

The third issue of Vail's zine Jigsaw, published in 1991 after she spent time in Washington, D.C., was subtitled "angry grrrl zine".[42] In spring 1991 Cheslow was living in San Francisco, and she received letters from Ian MacKaye and Nation of Ulysses' Tim Green informing her about Bikini Kill and "angry grrrl" zines.[42] That spring 1991, Neuman and Wolfe spent spring break in D.C. and formed Bratmobile there with Erin Smith, Christina Billotte (of Autoclave), and Jen Smith.[42] Bikini Kill toured with Nation of Ulysses in May/June 1991, converging in D.C. with Bratmobile that summer.[35][42] It was here that Neuman and Wolfe created the first issue of riot grrrl zine.[35]

While Bikini Kill and Bratmobile band members were in D.C. during summer 1991, a meeting was held with women from the D.C. area to discuss how to address sexism in the punk scene. These women were inspired by recent anti-racist riots in D.C., and they wanted to start a "girl riot" against a society they felt offered no validation of women's experiences.[17] The first riot grrrl meeting was organized by Kathleen Hanna and Jenny Toomey, and it was held at the Positive Force group house in Arlington, Virginia.[56][58] Hanna later said, "We had to go to a Positive Force meeting first. I'd never had a pitch meeting before. But I was doing a pitch meeting for why they should let us use their house for this all-women's radical feminist community organizing meeting."[56]

In August 1991 many of these individuals gathered at the International Pop Underground Convention in Olympia. The first night of the event became known as "Girl Night".[59] Tucker played her first show that night, on guitar and vocals with Heavens to Betsy and Tracy Sawyer on drums.[51][59] Writing later about that summer, Melissa Klein (Wolfe's housemate at the time) said, "Young women's anger and questioning fomented and smoldered until it became an all-out gathering of momentum toward action...Bikini Kill promoted 'Revolution Girl Style Now' and 'Stop the J-Word Jealousy From Killing Girl Love'."[35] As this ideal spread via band tours, zines, and word of mouth, riot grrrl chapters sprang up around the country.[35]

Bikini Kill edit

Kathleen Hanna, Tobi Vail, and Kathi Wilcox were all studying at The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington during the late 1980s. Hanna worked at Reko Muse, a small collective art gallery that would frequently host local bands to play shows between art exhibitions. There she met Vail after booking her band, the Go Team.[60] At the same time, Vail was writing Jigsaw zine and working with friend Wilcox. Vail wrote at the time in Jigsaw:

I feel completely left out of the realm of everything that is so important to me. And I know that this is partly because punk rock is for and by boys mostly and partly because punk rock of this generation is coming of age in a time of mindless career-goal bands.[61]

With Billy Karren, Bikini Kill self-released a cassette of demos during summer 1991 titled Revolution Girl Style Now. Hanna, Vail and Wilcox also began collaboration on Bikini Kill zine during their first tours in 1991.[49][52] The band wrote songs collaboratively and encouraged a female-centric environment at their shows, urging women to come to the front of the stage and handing out lyric sheets. Bikini Kill made it their goal to inspire more women to join the male-dominated punk scene.[62] Hanna would also stage dive into the crowds to personally remove male hecklers who would often verbally and physically assault her during shows.[63] However, the band's reach did include a large male audience in addition to the female target audience.[63]

 
Kathleen Hanna in 1996

After releasing the Bikini Kill EP on the indie label Kill Rock Stars in 1992, Bikini Kill began to establish their audience. Members of Bikini Kill also began to collaborate with other high-profile musicians, including Joan Jett, whose music Hanna has described as an early example of the riot grrrl aesthetic.[64] Jett produced the single "New Radio"/"Rebel Girl" for the band after members of Bikini Kill heard "Activity Grrrl", a song Jett wrote about the band.[65] Bikini Kill's debut album Pussy Whipped, released in 1993, included the song "Rebel Girl". "Rebel Girl" has become one of Bikini Kill's signature songs as well as a widely-recognized anthem for the riot grrrl movement[66][67] While "the unforgettable anthem", as Robert Christgau calls it,[68] never charted due to its independent release, it has received widespread critical acclaim. It has been called a "classic",[69] and praised as part "of the most vital rock-n-roll of the era".[70] Bikini Kill's second album Reject All American was released in 1996, and the band broke up the next year.[71]

Despite retrospective acclaim, at the time the band was criticized for excluding men, and even Rolling Stone described Bikini Kill's first album as "yowling and moronic nag-unto-vomit tantrums."[27][72] "My joke is always like, I didn't just hit the glass ceiling, I pressed my naked [breasts] up against it," Hanna said of that time.[27] Bikini Kill eventually called for a "media blackout" due to their perceived misrepresentation of the movement by the media.[73] Their pioneer reputation endures but, as Hanna recalls:

[Bikini Kill was] very vilified during the '90s by so many people, and hated by so many people, and I think that that's been kind of written out of the history. People were throwing chains at our heads – people hated us – and it was really, really hard to be in that band.[74]

Bratmobile edit

 
Bratmobile in 1994.

Hailing from Eugene, Oregon, Bratmobile was a first-generation riot grrrl band that became the second-most prominent founding voice of the riot grrrl movement. In 1990, University of Oregon students Allison Wolfe and Molly Neuman collaborated on feminist zine Girl Germs with Washington, D.C.'s Jen Smith, touching on sexism in their local music scenes.[61]

We were very encouraged by people like Tobi and Kathleen in Olympia, and we were like, "Oh let's do a band, let's do radio—we wanna [sic] have an all-girl radio show!"[11]

During spring 1991, Erin Smith, Christina Billotte (of Autoclave), and Jen Smith (no relation to Erin) joined Wolfe and Neuman in Bratmobile when the latter two temporarily relocated to Washington, D.C. Neuman and Erin Smith were previously introduced at a Nation of Ulysses show in Washington, D.C., in December 1990 by mutual friend Calvin Johnson.[50] Jen Smith had written in a letter to Wolfe, "We need to start a girl RIOT!"[61][75] Jen Smith proposed they collaborate with members of Bikini Kill on a zine called Girl Riot. When Neuman began the zine, she changed its title to riot grrrl, providing a networking forum for young women in the wider music scene and giving the movement its name.[61]

Erin Smith, Jen Smith, Billotte, Wolfe, and Neuman released only one tape together, titled Bratmobile DC.[76][77] Thereafter, Bratmobile became a trio with Wolfe, Neuman, and Erin Smith. They played their first show together as Bratmobile in July 1991, with Neuman on drums, Erin Smith on guitar, and Wolfe on vocals.[50]

Between 1991 and 1994 Bratmobile released the album Pottymouth and EP The Real Janelle on Kill Rock Stars, as well as The Peel Session.[78] Bratmobile toured with Heavens to Betsy in 1992 and broke up in 1994.[78]

International Pop Underground Convention edit

From August 20 – 25, 1991, K Records held an indie music festival in Olympia called the International Pop Underground Convention (or IPU).[79][80][81][82][83] A promotional poster reads:

As the corporate ogre expands its creeping influence on the minds of industrialized youth, the time has come for the International Rockers of the World to convene in celebration of our grand independence. Hangman hipsters, new mod rockers, sidestreet walkers, scooter-mounted dream girls, punks, teds, the instigators of the Love Rock Explosion, the editors of every angry grrrl zine, the plotters of youth rebellion in every form, the midwestern librarians and Scottish ski instructors who live by night, all are setting aside August 20–25, 1991 as the time.[36]

A mostly all-female bill on the first night, called "Love Rock Revolution Girl Style Now!" and later simply "Girl Night", signaled a major step in the movement.[79][80][81][82][59] The night was organized by Lois Maffeo, KAOS DJ Michelle Noel (who later organized the first Yoyo A Go Go in 1994), and Margaret Doherty.[79] The lineup featured Maffeo, Tobi Vail solo, Christina Billotte solo, Bratmobile, Heavens to Betsy, Nikki McClure, Jean Smith of Mecca Normal, 7 Year Bitch, Kicking Giant, Rose Melberg, Kreviss, I Scream Truck, the Spinanes, and two side projects of Kathleen Hanna: Suture, with Sharon Cheslow of Chalk Circle (DC's first all-women punk band) and Dug E. Bird of Beefeater, and the Wondertwins with Tim Green of Nation of Ulysses.[79][81][82] It was here that so many zinester people who'd only known each other from networking, mail, or talking on the phone, finally met and were brought together by an entire night of music dedicated to, for, and by women.[51]

An exceptionally large number of independent bands played and collaborated within the Olympia music scene. The convention also featured bands such as Bikini Kill, Nation of Ulysses, Unwound, L7, the Fastbacks, Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet, Girl Trouble, The Pastels, Seaweed, Scrawl, Jad Fair, Thee Headcoats, Steve Fisk, Tsunami, Fugazi, Sleepyhead, The Mummies, and spoken-word artist Juliana Luecking.[79][83] This convention demonstrated a new relationship between audience and performers, dismantling the power dynamic of the past, for instance voicing anger at people harassing the female performers.[84]

Spread of North America riot grrrl edit

Exposure to Bikini Kill and then Bratmobile inspired other riot grrrl factions to spring up around the United States and Canada. Women in other regional punk music scenes across North America were encouraged to form their own bands and start their own zines.[11] While Bikini Kill, amongst other bands, frequently avoided attention from mainstream media outlets due to the fear that riot grrrl would be co-opted by corporate enterprises, in the few interviews they did take, they often made the movement out to be bigger than it was, claiming the music scene existed in cities far beyond its actual scope. This encouraged feminists to seek out said scenes, and when they couldn't find them, they created them on their own, further broadening riot grrrl's scope.[59]

From July 31 to August 2, 1992, the first Riot Grrrl Convention brought people together in Washington, D.C. for a weekend of performances and workshops on topics such as rape, sexuality, racism, domestic violence, and self-defense.[35][37] A promotional flier reads:

Calling all grrrls and women! The riot grrrls in and around Washington DC are organizing a three-day riot grrrl convention this summer. We invite all grrrl and feminist bands and performers, grrrl fanzine writers, and energetic grrrls and boys from across the country to contribute their skills, energy, anger, creativity and curiosity. We will be having at least three shows, as well as workshops on everything from self-defense, to how to run a soundboard and how to lay out a zine. Plus, there will be a lot of time to talk with other women about how we fit (or don't fit!) in the punk community.[85]

By 1994, riot grrrl had been discovered by the mainstream, and Bikini Kill were increasingly referred to as pioneers of the movement.[37] These bands credited with establishing the subculture of riot grrrl resisted being co-opted as heads of the movement broadly.[86] Dedicated to a DIY ethos, bands and artists encouraged grrrls to challenge hierarchies and self-produce work relating to their own experiences and identities.[87]

English riot grrrl edit

As Bikini Kill's music and zines spread throughout England in 1991–92, bands formed and were quick to embrace riot grrrl.[3] England had previously spawned such influential all-female or female-fronted punk bands as X-Ray Spex, The Slits, and The Raincoats that provided inspiration.[3][13]

Huggy Bear formed in 1991, calling themselves "girl-boy revolutionaries" in reference to both their political philosophy and the gender makeup of their band, and were based in Brighton and London.[3][13][88][89][90] Their debut EP was released in 1992, and in the same year they began working closely with Bikini Kill as riot grrrl's popularity peaked on both sides of the Atlantic.[3] This culminated in a 1993 split album on Catcall Records (Huggy Bear) and Kill Rock Stars (Bikini Kill) called Our Troubled Youth/Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah, the names of the Huggy Bear and Bikini Kill sides respectively.[89][91] Huggy Bear received widespread national attention after performing their third single "Her Jazz", a split release between Catcall and Wiiija Records, on The Word in 1993.[3][90][91] Kill Rock Stars had been co-founded in Olympia by Slim Moon and Tinuviel Sampson, while Catcall was founded by former Manchester punk zine City Fun writer Liz Naylor.[92][93] Naylor had met Bikini Kill's Kathy Wilcox by chance while they were each traveling in Europe in 1991, and Wilcox sent Naylor music and the first issues of Riot Grrrl and Jigsaw zines during their subsequent correspondence.[93]

Skinned Teen formed in London in 1992, when they were around 14 years old. They were included in British filmmaker Lucy Thane's documentary of the 1993 Bikini Kill/Huggy Bear UK tour titled It Changed My Life: Bikini Kill In The U.K.; the film also included The Raincoats and queercore band Sister George.[3][91][92][93][94][95][96] Thane, from Sheffield, had previously met the Raincoats' Ana da Silva at a Hole show after Hole covered a Raincoats song.[93] Thane filmed Bikini Kill and Huggy Bear for the entirety of their 1993 tour using borrowed film and video equipment.[93] Naylor was tour manager.[93] It Changed My Life premiered in 1993 at The Kitchen in New York City, during a film program curated by filmmaker Jill Reiter.[93]

UK zines that wrote about riot grrrl at the time included Girlfrenzy and Ablaze!.[91]

Decline and later developments edit

By the mid-nineties, riot grrrl had severely splintered. Many within the movement felt that the mainstream media had completely misrepresented their message, and that the politically radical aspects of riot grrrl had been subverted by the likes of the Spice Girls and their "girl power" message, or co-opted by ostensibly women-centered bands (though sometimes with only one female performer per band) and festivals like Lilith Fair.[97]

 
Bikini Kill performing in 2019

Of the original riot grrrl bands, Bratmobile, Heavens to Betsy and Huggy Bear had split in 1994, Excuse 17 and most of the UK bands had split by 1995, and Bikini Kill and Emily's Sassy Lime (formed in Southern California in 1993) released their last records in 1996. However, Team Dresch were active as late as 1998, the Gossip were active from 1999, and Bratmobile reformed in 2000. Perhaps most prolific of all, Sleater-Kinney were active from 1994 to 2006, releasing seven albums.[98][99] Corin Tucker (Heavens to Betsy) and Carrie Brownstein (Excuse 17) had formed Sleater-Kinney in Olympia.[100]

Many of the women involved in riot grrrl are still active in creating politically charged music. Kathleen Hanna went on to found the electro-feminist post-punk "protest pop" group Le Tigre and later the Julie Ruin, Kathi Wilcox joined the Casual Dots with Christina Billotte of Slant 6, and Tobi Vail formed Spider and the Webs. Sleater-Kinney reformed the band in 2014 after an 8-year hiatus and have released three albums since, while Bratmobile reunited to release two albums, before Allison Wolfe began singing with other all-women bands, Cold Cold Hearts, and Partyline. Molly Neuman went on to play with New York punk band Love Or Perish and run her own indie label called Simple Social Graces Discos, as well as co-owning Lookout! Records and managing the Donnas, Ted Leo, Some Girls, and the Locust. Kaia Wilson of Team Dresch and multimedia artist Tammy Rae Carland went on to form the now-defunct Mr. Lady Records which released albums by the Butchies, Electrelane, Kaia Wilson, Le Tigre, Sarah Dougher, Sextional, Tami Hart, The Haggard, TJO TKO, The Movies, V for Vendetta, The Quails.[101][102] Bikini Kill played a string of shows in 2019[103] to present.[104]

Feminism and riot grrrl culture edit

Riot grrrl culture is often associated with third wave feminism, which also grew rapidly during the same early nineties timeframe. The movement of third-wave feminism focused less on laws and the political process and more on individual identity. The movement of third-wave feminism is said to have arisen out of the realization that women are of many colors, ethnicities, nationalities, religions and cultural backgrounds.[105] While multiracial feminist movements have existed prior to the third wave, the proliferation of technology during the early nineties allowed for easier networking amongst feminist groups. Riot grrrls used media spectacle to their advantage, crafting works from oppositional technologies such as zines, videography, and music.[106] The riot grrrl movement allowed women their own space to create music and make political statements about the issues they were facing in the punk rock community and in society. They used their music and publications to express their views on issues such as patriarchy, double standards against women, rape, domestic abuse, sexuality, and female empowerment.[107]

An undated, typewritten Bikini Kill tour flier answers the question "What is Riot grrrl?" with:

"[Riot Grrrl is ...] Because we girls want to create mediums that speak to US. We are tired of boy band after boy band, boy zine after boy zine, boy punk after boy punk after boy... Because we need to talk to each other. Communication and inclusion are key. We will never know if we don't break the code of silence... Because in every form of media we see ourselves slapped, decapitated, laughed at, objectified, raped, trivialized, pushed, ignored, stereotyped, kicked, scorned, molested, silenced, invalidated, knifed, shot, choked and killed. Because a safe space needs to be created for girls where we can open our eyes and reach out to each other without being threatened by this sexist society and our day to day bullshit."[108]

The riot grrrl movement encouraged women to develop their own place in a male-dominated punk scene. Punk shows had come to be understood as places where "women could make their way to the front of the crowd into the mosh pit, but had to 'fight ten times harder' because they were female, and sexually charged violence such as groping and rape had been reported."[109]

In contrast, riot grrrl bands would often actively invite members of the audience to talk about their personal experiences with sensitive issues such as sexual abuse, pass out lyric sheets to everyone in the audience, and often demand that the mosh boys move to the back or side to allow space in front for the girls in the audience.[64] The bands weren't always enthusiastically received at shows by male audience members. Punk Planet editor Daniel Sinker wrote in We Owe You Nothing:

The vehemence fanzines large and small reserved for riot grrrl – and Bikini Kill in particular – was shocking. The punk zine editors' use of 'bitches', 'cunts', 'man-haters', and 'dykes' was proof-positive that sexism was still strong in the punk scene.[110]

Kathi Wilcox said in a fanzine interview:

I've been in a state of surprise for several years about this very thing. I don't know why so-called punk rockers are so threatened by a little shake-up of the truly boring dynamic of the standard show atmosphere. How fresh is the idea of fifty sweaty hardcore boys slamming into each other or jumping on each others' heads? Granted, it's kind of cool to be on stage and have action in the front, much more inspiring than to look out at a crowd of zombies, but so often the survival-of-the-fittest principle is in operation in the pit, and what girl wants to go up against a pack of Rollins boys who usually only want to be extra mean to her anyway just to make her "prove" her place in the pit. This was the case when I was first going to shows, and it's sad that things haven't changed at all since. ... But it would have been so cool if at one of these shows someone onstage would have said, hey let's have more girls up in the front, just so I could have had more company and girls over to side could have seen better/been in the action. So yeah, we do encourage girls to the front, and sometimes when shows have gotten really violent (like when we were in England) we had to ask the boys to move to the side or the back because it was just too fucking scary for us, after several attacks and threats, to face another sea of hostile boy-faces right in the front.[111]

Kathleen Hanna later wrote: "It was also super schizo to play shows where guys threw stuff at us, called us cunts and yelled "take it off" during our set, and then the next night perform for throngs of amazing girls singing along to every lyric and cheering after every song."[60]

Many men were supporters of riot grrrl culture and acts. Calvin Johnson and Slim Moon have been instrumental in publishing riot grrrl bands on the labels they founded, K Records and Kill Rock Stars respectively. Alec Empire of Atari Teenage Riot said, "I was totally into the riot grrrl music, I see it as a very important form of expression. I learned a lot from that, way more maybe than from 'male' punk rock."[112] Dave Grohl and Kurt Cobain dated Kathleen Hanna and Tobi Vail (also respectively), and often played with Bikini Kill even after splitting with them; Kurt was a big fan of the Slits and even convinced the Raincoats to reform. He once said, "The future of rock belongs to women."[113] Many riot grrrl bands included male band members, such as Billy Karren of Bikini Kill or Jon Slade and Chris Rawley of Huggy Bear.

The New-York Historical Society's documentation on "Women & the American Story" said that "the riot grrrl movement struggled to recognize intersectionality" and therefore many women of color left when they felt their voices weren't being heard.[114] In 1997, punk musician Tamar-kali Brown created Sista Grrrl by and for Black women and girls, in response to the marginalization of women of color in riot grrrl.[115] Sista Grrrls was the name for Tamar-kali's New York punk group with three other Black women: Simi Stone, Honeychild Coleman, and Maya Sokora.[114] These four organized a series of punk shows, known as Sista Grrrl Riots, with Black women and girls who were in bands or performed solo.[116] The Slits' Ari Up opened one of the riots as a Sista Grrrl ally,[116] and Honeychild Coleman later toured as guitarist with the reformed Slits in 2010.[117]

Scholars have argued that riot grrrl remains relevant on a global scale because it engages with "everyday politics" or the ways that people in their day-to-day activities participate in or experience power dynamics.[118] It allows grrrls to connect their interests and contemporary lives to urgent political issues in personal and subversive ways.[119] One way riot grrrl achieved this was through language that centered young women and girls as political subjects with agency and power, in a way that broke away from historical models of feminism and radical speech.[120] This "history-in-the-making" approach aligned well with riot grrrl's devotion to DIY.[120]

Zines and publications edit

Even as the Seattle-area rock scene came to international mainstream media attention, riot grrrl remained a willfully underground phenomenon.[108] Most musicians shunned the major record labels, devotedly working instead with indie labels such as Kill Rock Stars, K Records, Slampt, Piao! Records, Simple Machines, Catcall, WIIIJA and Chainsaw Records.

Riot grrrl's momentum was also hugely supported by an explosion of creativity in homemade cut and paste, xeroxed, collage zines that covered a variety of feminist topics, frequently attempting to draw out the political implications of intensely personal experiences in a "privately public" space.[108] Zines often described experiences with sexism, mental illness, body image and eating disorders, sexual abuse, racism, rape, discrimination, stalking, domestic violence, incest, homophobia, and sometimes vegetarianism. Grrrl zine editors are collectively engaged in forms of writing and writing instruction that challenge both dominant notions of the author as an individualized, bodiless space and notions of feminism as primarily an adult political project.[121]

These zines were archived by zinewiki.com, and Riot Grrrl Press, started in Washington DC in 1992 by Erika Reinstein & May Summer.[122]

Bands often attempted to reappropriate derogatory phrases like "cunt", "bitch", "dyke", and "slut", writing them proudly on their skin with lipstick or fat markers. Kathleen Hanna was writing "slut" on her stomach at shows as early as 1992, intentionally fusing feminist art and activist practices.[20] Many of the women involved with queercore were also interested in riot grrrl, and zines such as Chainsaw by Donna Dresch, Sister Nobody, Jane Gets A Divorce and I (heart) Amy Carter by Tammy Rae Carland embody both movements. There were also national conventions like in Washington, D.C.,[35][37] or the Pussystock festival in New York City, as well as various subsequent indie-documentaries like Don't Need You: the Herstory of Riot Grrrl.

Other riot grrrl zines such as Ramdasha Bikceem's GUNK, started in 1990 when she was 15, focused on the intersections of punk, gender, and racism.[116] Bikceem, from New Jersey, had found out about riot grrrl zines after a friend became Tobi Vail's roommate in Olympia. Bikceem's band Gunk performed at the first Riot Grrrl Convention in D.C. in 1992.[123][124] In GUNK #4 Bikceem wrote about the politics of being a Black grrrl, "I'll go out somewhere with my friends who all look equally as weird as me, but say we get hassled by the cops for skating or something. That cop is going to remember my face a lot clearer than say one of my white girlfriends."[116] Mimi Thi Nguyen's Slant and Sabrina Margarita Alcantara-Tan's Bamboo Girl critiqued riot grrrl from the perspective of Asian American girls.[116][125][126] In 1997, Nguyen published the compilation zine Evolution of a Race Riot.[125]

In the mid-1990s, zines were also published on the Internet as e-zines.[127] Websites such as Gurl.com and ChickClick were created out of dissatisfaction of media available to women and parodied content found in mainstream teen and women's magazines.[128][129] Both Gurl.com and ChickClick had a message board and free web hosting services, where users could also create and contribute their own content, which in turn created a reciprocal relationship where women could also be seen as creators rather than consumers.[127][130]: 154 

Starting during the fall of 2010, the "Riot Grrrl Collection" has been housed at New York University's Fales Library and Special Collections, as "The Fales Riot Grrrl Collection". The collection's primary mandate is "to collect unique materials that provide documentation of the creative process of individuals and the chronology of the [Riot Grrrl] movement overall".[131] Kathleen Hanna, Molly Neuman, Allison Wolfe, Ramdasha Bikceem, Johanna Fateman, Becca Albee (co-founder of Excuse 17), Lucy Thane, Tammy Rae Carland, and Mimi Thi Nguyen have donated primary source material.[131] The collection is the brainchild of Lisa Darms, Senior Archivist at the Fales Library. According to Jenna Freedman, a librarian who maintains a zine collection at Barnard College, "It's just essential to preserve the activist voices in their own unmediated work, especially because of the media blackout that they called for". Kathleen Hanna, while understanding no collection can replicate the concert experience, feels the collection is a safe place that will be "free from feminist erasure".[131][132]

Media misconceptions edit

At first most Riot Grrrls were open to using the media as a way to spread the word to other girls. Shortly thereafter, however, feeling that they had been misrepresented, trivialized, commercialized, and made into a new fad and trend, the Riot Grrrls changed their minds.[133]

As media attention increasingly focused on the emerging grunge and alternative rock scene in the mid-nineties, the term "Riot Grrrl" was often used as a catchall for female-fronted bands and applied to less political alternative rock acts. While many female-centric or all-women rock bands, such as Frightwig, Hole, 7 Year Bitch, Babes in Toyland, the Breeders, the Gits, Lunachicks, Liz Phair, Veruca Salt, and L7, shared similar DIY tactics and feminist ideologies with the riot grrrl movement, not all of these acts self-identified with the riot grrrl label.[3][13] "It used to frustrate me when posters would say 'all-girl band' or 'riot grrrl'," recalled L7's Donita Sparks. "We cheered loudly when we went to Italy: it said, 'Rock from the USA.'"[134]Courtney Love, in particular, felt the need to disassociate with Riot Grrrl as a whole:

As supportive as I am of them, there's a faction that says, "We don't know how to play, but we're not going to follow your male-measured idea of what good is." Look, good is Led Zeppelin II. That's fucking good. And I'm not going to sit here and say you're a good band when you suck. They're like, "But we're entitled to suck." Really? We work so hard to get good at what we do without covering up who we are as women.[40]

To their chagrin, in 1992 riot grrrls found themselves in the media spotlight of magazines from Seventeen to Newsweek.[135][136] Newsweek's headline was "Riot Girl is feminism with a loud happy face dotting the 'i'," and USA Today ran a headline saying "From hundreds of once pink, frilly bedrooms comes the young feminist revolution."[37] Fallout from the media coverage led to resignations from the movement, including Jessica Hopper, a teenage music critic who was at the center of the Newsweek article.[137] Hopper, later the author of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic, said, "Some people were really upset because I talked to mainstream media about what I felt riot grrrl was...At the time there was much more of a chasm between the underground and the mainstream and people didn't want mainstream girls showing up to this, and I just thought, I didn't want to be part of something that wasn't for all women."[137] To ease tension, Kathleen Hanna called a "media blackout" for that year.

In an essay from January 1994 that had been included in the double compact disc release of Bikini Kill's first two albums, Tobi Vail responded to media misrepresentation of Bikini Kill and riot grrrl in general:

One huge misconception for instance that has been repeated over and over again in magazines we have never spoken to and also by those who believe these sources without checking things out themselves is that Bikini Kill is the definitive 'riot girl band' ... We are not in anyway 'leaders of' or authorities on the 'Riot Girl' movement. In fact, as individuals we have each had different experiences with, feelings on, opinions of and varying degrees of involvement with 'Riot Girl' and though we totally respect those who still feel that label is important and meaningful to them, we have never used that term to describe ourselves AS A BAND. As individuals we respect and utilize and subscribe to a variety of different aesthetics, strategies, and beliefs, both political and punk-wise, some of which are probably considered 'riot girl.'[138]

Sharon Cheslow stated in EMP's Riot Grrrl Retrospective documentary:

There were a lot of very important ideas that I think the mainstream media couldn't handle, so it was easier to focus on the fact that these were girls who were wearing barrettes in their hair or writing 'slut' on their stomach.

Corin Tucker stated:

I think it was deliberate that we were made to look like we were just ridiculous girls parading around in our underwear. They refused to do serious interviews with us, they misprinted what we had to say, they would take our articles, and our fanzines, and our essays and take them out of context. We wrote a lot about sexual abuse and sexual assault for teenagers and young women. I think those are really important concepts that the media never addressed.[139]

Other female-fronted punk bands, such as Spitboy, were less comfortable with the childhood-centered issues of much of the riot grrrl aesthetic, but nonetheless dealt explicitly with feminist and related issues as well.[140] Lesbian-centric Queercore[141] bands, such as Fifth Column, Tribe 8, Adickdid, the Third Sex, Excuse 17, and Team Dresch, wrote songs dealing with matters specific to women and their position in society, exploring issues such as both sexual[142] and gender identity.[143] A documentary film put together by a San Diego psychiatrist, Dr. Lisa Rose Apramian, Not Bad for a Girl, explored some of these issues in interviews with many of the musicians in the riot grrrl scene at the time.[144]

Criticism edit

The "Riot Grrrl" movement received criticism for not being inclusive enough. Emily White wrote for the Chicago Reader in 1992, "Riot Girls are often accused of being separatist: they want to form a life away from men and invent 'girl culture.'"[145] One major argument was that the movement focused on middle-class white women, alienating other kinds of women.[146][147][148] This criticism emerged early in the movement. In 1993, Ramdasha Bikceem wrote in her zine, Gunk,

Riot grrrl calls for change, but I question who it's including ... I see Riot Grrrl growing very closed to a very few i.e. white middle class punk girls.[108]

Riot grrrl, especially in the 1990s, focused heavily on the use of the body as "message boards" for public demonstration.[149] Riot grrrl faced similar issues as the original punk scene it was protesting against, in terms of its lack of intersectionality.[150] Black women, specifically, did not feel the counterculture was a safe-space to express their lived experiences, anger, and art.[150] Feeling excluded from the riot grrrl scene, Sista Grrrl Riots were created in the late 1990s by Tamar-kali Brown, Simi Stone, Honeychild Coleman, and Maya Sokora.[150] Sista Grrrls created a space by and for Black women to freely express themselves through punk. The Sista Grrrl movement was foundational to contemporary Afro-punk.[150] Tamar-kali later said, "I was a different type of girl. I was hearing what they were saying, but I was living in an environment where people were getting stabbed. Riot Grrrl felt like a bubblegum expression."[116]

Musician Courtney Love criticized the movement for being too doctrinaire and censorious:

Look, you've got these highly intelligent imperious girls, but who told them it was their undeniable American right not to be offended? Being offended is part of being in the real world. I'm offended every time I see George Bush on TV![151]

Some have suggested that, while riot grrrl bands worked to ensure their shows were safe spaces in which women could find solidarity and create their own subculture, some higher-profile riot grrrl bands participated in the Michigan Womyn's Music Festival, a trans-exclusionary event that had a "womyn-born womyn" policy. Former members of Le Tigre saw protests at their shows for having participated in the festival in 2001 and 2005.[152] However, Kathleen Hanna stated directly that she supported trans rights on her own Twitter account.[153] Additionally, JD Samson, another former member of Le Tigre, is genderfluid.[154]

Kathleen Hanna acknowledged some of these critiques in her zine April Fools' Day. When describing her traumas related to addiction, she said: "It seems to me that each addict functions within his/her one context in terms of race, gender, location, class, personality, access, etc. … so it would be ridiculous for me to try and write a 'manifesto' or a 'universal account' of how addiction works."[155] Hanna followed a legacy of privilege-checking in riot grrrl culture and the community commitment to differentiate between personal experiences and trauma from systemic oppression when necessary.[86] Riot grrrl activists have often tended to create themselves into marginalized subjects to strengthen their credibility within the subculture without recognizing their positionality.[86]

Legacy and resurgence edit

 
Carrie Brownstein of Excuse 17 and Sleater-Kinney in 2005

In the foreword to the 2007 book, Riot Grrrl: Revolution Girl Style Now!, Beth Ditto writes of riot grrrl,

A movement formed by a handful of girls who felt empowered, who were angry, hilarious, and extreme through and for each other. Built on the floors of strangers' living rooms, tops of Xerox machines, snail mail, word of mouth and mixtapes, riot grrrl reinvented punk.[156]

Additionally, Ditto writes about riot grrrl's influence on her personally and on her music. She muses on the meaning of the movement for her generation,

Until I found riot grrrl, or riot grrrl found me I was just another Gloria Steinem NOW feminist trying to take a stand in shop class. Now I am a musician, a writer, a whole person.[156]

Many women write to Hanna in hopes of reviving the Riot Grrrl Movement. Hanna says, "Don't revive it, make something better".[157] In 2010 Girls to the Front: The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution became the first published history of the riot grrrl movement.[158][159] The author had also attended Riot Grrrl meetings herself.[160] As of 2019 there were approximately ten weekly riot grrrl meetings held nationwide and bands multiplying faster than can be counted.[4][18]

 
The Regrettes formed in 2015 and merge riot grrrl with elements of doo-wop[161]

In 2013 Astria Suparak and Ceci Moss curated Alien She, an exhibition examining the impact of Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers. Alien She focuses on seven people whose visual art practices were informed by their contact with Riot Grrrl. Many of them work in multiple disciplines, such as sculpture, installation, video, documentary film, photography, drawing, printmaking, new media, social practice, curation, music, writing and performance—a reflection of the movement's artistic diversity and mutability.[162][163][164] It opened September 2013 at the Miller Gallery at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, and ran through February the following year. It visited four subsequent art spaces (Vox Populi in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, March – April 2014; Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, October 2014 – January 2015; Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, California, February – May 2015; and Pacific Northwest College of Art: 511 Gallery and the Museum of Contemporary Craft in Portland, Oregon, September 3, 2015 – January 9, 2016[165]).

The term "grrrl" (or "grrl") itself has since been co-opted or used by agencies as diverse as advocacy on behalf of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (GRRL POWER 1.0 5-PACK / Memetics for the Ladies)[166] and a roller derby league in Singapore.[167]

The resurgence of riot grrrl is clearly visible in fourth-wave feminists worldwide who cite the original movement as an interest or influence on their lives and/or their work.[168][169] Some of them are self-proclaimed riot grrrls while others consider themselves simply admirers or fans. In an age where Internet is the most accessible platform for individuals to express themselves, the fourth-wave riot grrrl community has risen in popularity in recent years. Not only do these online platforms capture discussion regarding larger topics of intersectional oppression, but they also provide space for budding feminists to express smaller issues, such as the successes and challenges of their everyday lives. Young feminists have harnessed the internet as a forum for self-determinism and genuine, open expression: a core part of the riot grrrl message that allows young adults room to decide for themselves who they are.[23]

In January 2019, Bikini Kill announced their reunion tour for the first time since their last show in Tokyo 22 years ago. The Guardian stated in an article about reunion that the once-underground riot grrrl movement has gone mainstream due to word of mouth from celebrities and the increased attention to other modern feminist developments such as the Me Too movement. In the same article, drummer Tobi Vail stated her frustration with lack of social progress related to feminism.[103]

These same issues still exist, being a woman in public is very intense, whether it's in the public eye or just walking down the street at night by yourself.[103]

Vail also explained the aims of their reunion, that women discover the band and understand their history, especially those who did not have the opportunity to hear them during the original riot grrrl movement.

We're doing it because we want to be a part of this conversation about what feminism is in this moment.[103]

Global proliferation edit

 
Pussy Riot. Photo by Denis Bochkarev.

Since its beginnings, the riot grrrl movement was attractive to many women in varied cultures. Its spread across the world established bands in Brazil, Paraguay, Israel, Australia, Malaysia, and Europe,[170] and its globalization was also aided by the distribution of zines across Asia, Europe, and South America.[171] The discovery of riot grrrl provided women across the globe with access to an outlet that challenged the dominant culture's attitudes toward the female body through a form of self-expression[170] that previously was often inaccessible to women in non-western nations.[171] In addition to becoming a vehicle of expression for equality, bands in the genre affected the status quo of the music industry by challenging the gender norms that favoured male musicians.[172]

One of the most well-known bands to come out of the globalization of the riot grrrl movement is Pussy Riot, a Russian group formed in 2011 who self-identify as twenty-first century Russian riot grrrls.[171][173] Pussy Riot first came to popular media attention in 2012 when they staged a protest performance of "Punk Prayer" at the altar of Moscow's largest cathedral. The song includes an appeal to the Virgin Mary to banish Putin.[173][174][175] All three members of Pussy Riot were convicted of hooliganism and sentenced two years' imprisonment.[176][177] Pussy Riot performs music with themes of feminism, LGBT rights, and opposition to the policies of Russian president Vladimir Putin, whom the group considers to be a dictator.[171][173][178]

See also edit

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Further reading edit

  • Gottlieb, Joanne and Gayle Wald. "Smells Like Teen Spirit: Riot Grrrls, Revolution, and Women in Independent Rock." Microphone Fiends: Youth Music and Youth Culture. Eds. Andrew Ross and Tricia Rose. New York: Routledge, 1994.
  • Kaltefleiter, Caroline K. (2016). "Start your own revolution: agency and action of the Riot Grrrl network". International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy. 36 (11/12): 808–823. doi:10.1108/IJSSP-06-2016-0067. ISSN 0144-333X.
  • Kearney, Mary Celeste. "Brought to You by Girl Power: Riot Grrrl's Networked Media Economy," Girls Make Media. New York: Routledge, 2006. ISBN 0-415-97278-7.
  • Kearney, Mary Celeste. "‘Don’t Need You’: Rethinking Identity Politics and Separatism from a Grrrl Perspective," Youth Culture: Identity in a Postmodern World . Ed. Jonathan Epstein. Cambridge: Blackwell, 1998. ISBN 1557868506.
  • Kearney, Mary Celeste. "The Missing Links: Riot Grrrl—Feminism—Lesbian Culture." Sexing the Groove: Popular Music and Gender. Ed. Sheila Whiteley. New York: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 0-415-14670-4.
  • Leonard, Marion. "Feminism,‘Subculture’, and Grrrl Power." Sexing the Groove: Popular Music and Gender. Ed. Sheila Whiteley. New York: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 0-415-14670-4.
  • Nguyen, Mimi Thi. "Riot Grrrl, Race, and Revival." Women & Performance 22. 2-3 (2012): 173-196.

External links edit

Articles edit

  • The 10 myths of Riot Grrrl
  • Grrrl power by Laura Barton
  • Riot Girl: still relevant 20 years on by Jessica Hopper

Dedicated Websites edit

  • Riot Grrrl Collections at the Fales Special Collections at NYU
  • Riot Grrrl International Chapters
  • The Riot Grrrl Manifesto
  • She Came to Riot
  • Sophia Smith Collection zines collection at the Sophia Smith Collection, Smith College Special Collections

riot, grrrl, album, hirano, riot, girl, underground, feminist, punk, movement, that, began, during, early, 1990s, within, united, states, olympia, washington, greater, pacific, northwest, expanded, least, other, countries, subcultural, movement, that, combines. For the album by Aya Hirano see Riot Girl Riot grrrl is an underground feminist punk movement that began during the early 1990s within the United States in Olympia 1 Washington 2 and the greater Pacific Northwest 3 and has expanded to at least 26 other countries 4 A subcultural movement that combines feminism punk music and politics 5 it is often associated with third wave feminism which is sometimes seen as having grown out of the riot grrrl movement and has recently been seen in fourth wave feminist punk music that rose in the 2010s 6 The genre has also been described as coming out of indie rock with the punk scene serving as an inspiration for a movement in which women could express anger rage and frustration emotions considered socially acceptable for male songwriters but less commonly for women 7 Riot grrrlStylistic originsMusicalHardcore punkpunk rockalternative rockindie rock IdeologicalThird wave feminismfourth wave feminismpunkCultural originsEarly 1990s Pacific Northwest and Olympia Washington USTypical instrumentsElectric guitarvocalsbassdrumskeyboardsRegional scenesWashingtonLocal scenesOlympia Washington USOther topicsFeminism foxcore Guerrilla Girls kinderwhore punk subculture queercoreRiot grrrl songs often addressed issues such as rape domestic abuse sexuality racism patriarchy classism anarchism and female empowerment Primary bands most associated with the movement by media include Bikini Kill Bratmobile Heavens to Betsy Excuse 17 Slant 6 Emily s Sassy Lime Huggy Bear Jack Off Jill later coining the term Riot Goth and Skinned Teen 1 8 9 10 11 12 3 13 Also included were queercore groups such as Team Dresch and the Third Sex 1 14 In addition to a unique music scene and genre riot grrrl became a subculture involving a DIY ethic zines art political action and activism 15 The movement quickly spread well beyond its musical roots to influence the vibrant zine and Internet based nature of fourth wave feminism complete with local meetings and grassroots organizing to end intersectional forms of prejudice and oppression especially physical and emotional violence against all genders 16 Riot grrrls are known to hold meetings start chapters 4 and support and organize women in music 17 as well as art created by transgender people gay individuals lesbians and other communities 14 Contents 1 Origins 1 1 Pacific Northwest and Washington D C 1 2 Bikini Kill 1 3 Bratmobile 1 4 International Pop Underground Convention 1 5 Spread of North America riot grrrl 1 6 English riot grrrl 1 7 Decline and later developments 2 Feminism and riot grrrl culture 2 1 Zines and publications 3 Media misconceptions 4 Criticism 5 Legacy and resurgence 5 1 Global proliferation 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External links 9 1 Articles 9 2 Dedicated WebsitesOrigins editThe riot grrrl movement originated in 1991 when a group of women from Olympia Washington and Washington D C held a meeting about sexism in their local punk scenes in the United States 17 The word girl was intentionally used in order to focus on childhood a time when children have the strongest self esteem and belief in themselves 18 Riot grrrls then took a growling R replacing the I in the word as a way to take back the derogatory use of the term 19 Both double and triple R spellings are acceptable 20 The Seattle and Olympia Washington music scenes in the Pacific Northwest had sophisticated do it yourself DIY infrastructure 21 Women involved in local underground music scenes took advantage of this platform to articulate their feminist beliefs and desires by creating zines short for magazine 22 While the model of politically themed zines had already been used in punk culture as an alternative to mainstream culture zines also followed a longer legacy of self published feminist writing that allowed women to circulate ideas that would not otherwise be published 22 At the time there was discomfort among many women in the music scene who felt that they had no space for organizing due to the exclusionary male dominated nature of punk culture at the time Many women found that while they identified with the larger music oriented subculture of punk rock they often had little to no voice in their local scenes Women in the Washington punk scenes took it upon themselves to represent their own interests artistically through the new riot grrrl subculture 23 To quote Liz Naylor who would become the manager of English riot grrrl band Huggy Bear 21 There was a lot of anger and self mutilation In a symbolic sense women were cutting and destroying the established image of femininity aggressively tearing it down Riot grrrl bands were influenced by groundbreaking female punk and mainstream rock performers of the 1970s to the mid 1980s While many of these musicians were not originally associated with each other during their time and came from a variety of backgrounds and styles as a group they anticipated many of riot grrrl s musical and thematic attributes These performers include The Slits Poly Styrene Siouxsie Sioux The Raincoats Joan Jett Kim Gordon and Kim Deal among others 21 9 10 17 24 25 26 27 28 29 Of Kim Gordon in particular Kathleen Hanna noted She was a forerunner musically Just knowing a woman was in a band trading lead vocals playing bass and being a visual artist at the same time made me feel less alone 29 Riot grrrl musicians and musicians to be were also inspired by the 1982 U S musical drama movie Ladies and Gentlemen The Fabulous Stains which tells the story of a fictional seemingly proto riot grrrl band 30 Pacific Northwest and Washington D C edit Olympia Washington had a strong feminist artistic and cultural legacy that influenced early riot grrrl In the early 1980s Stella Marrs Dana Squires and Julie Fay co founded the store Girl City where they created art and performances 31 The first K Records release in 1982 was a cassette of Heather Lewis first band Supreme Cool Beings while she was a student at The Evergreen State College a year before she co founded Beat Happening 32 In 1985 The Go Team formed with then 15 year old Tobi Vail The band would go on to collaborate with Olympia scene musicians who are inherently linked to the riot grrrl movement Donna Dresch Lois Maffeo and Billy Boredom Karren 11 33 Karren was a rotating musician who played in the band and it was there that he and Vail played together for the first time later collaborating in several other bands which included Bikini Kill and The Frumpies Maffeo hosted a women centered radio show on Olympia s community radio station KAOS 31 34 35 Candice Pedersen interned at K Records in 1986 while at The Evergreen State College and became co owner in 1989 31 36 37 In the 1980s two articles on the topic of women in rock would be published by Puncture a Portland Oregon zine edited by Katherine Spielmann and Patty Stirling 38 Authored by Rough Trade employee Terri Sutton these articles became what is considered by some to be titular writing on riot grrrl ethos 39 One article Women Sex amp Rock n Roll 1989 is considered particularly important as the manifesto of the riot grrrl movement 40 Sutton would also say in Women In Rock An Open Letter written in 1988 To me rock and roll is about lust lust for feeling the worst I can say about a band is they re boring That s why it s so crucial that women get up onstage and impart inspire some emotion 41 Meanwhile in the Washington D C area Beat Happening fan Erin Smith started her zine Teenage Gang Debs in 1987 42 In 1988 two D C women that had been in all women punk bands there previously Chalk Circle s Sharon Cheslow and Fire Party s Amy Pickering joined forces with Cynthia Connolly and Lydia Ely to organize group discussions focusing on gender differences and sexism in the D C punk community 35 43 The results were published in the June 1988 issue of Maximum Rock n Roll 43 In November 1988 Connolly published the book Banned in DC Photos and Anecdotes From the DC Punk Underground 79 85 through her small press Sun Dog Propaganda and it was co edited with Cheslow and Ely along with Leslie Clague 35 42 44 These conversations and the book laid the groundwork for riot grrrl when members of Bikini Kill and Bratmobile later came to D C in 1991 43 In fall 1989 Erin Smith visited Olympia and met Maffeo through Beat Happening s Calvin Johnson 42 Johnson had been in The Go Team with Vail and co owned K Records with Candice Pedersen At the end of 1989 Cheslow began publishing her zine Interrobang focusing on punk and sexism and the first issue included an interview with Nation of Ulysses NOU 42 Vail saw a copy of this issue and was instantly captivated by NOU s aesthetic 43 Vail began publishing her zine Jigsaw in 1988 around the same time that Dresch started her zine Chainsaw 42 Zines became a means of urgent expression Laura Sister Nobody wrote in her zine Sister Nobody Us we are women who know that something is happening something that seems like a secret right now but won t stay like a secret for much longer 35 At the time Vail was working at a sandwich shop with Kathi Wilcox who was impressed by Vail s interest in girls in bands specifically including an aggressive emphasis on feminist issues 45 Meanwhile in 1989 Kathleen Hanna had co founded the Olympia art collective band Amy Carter and feminist gallery music venue Reko Muse both with Tammy Rae Carland and Heidi Arbogast 34 By summer 1989 the space had hosted The Go Team Babes in Toyland and Nirvana 34 Hanna also interned at SafePlace an Olympia domestic violence shelter and provider of sexual assault abuse services for which she did counseling gave presentations at local high schools and started a discussion group for teenage girls 34 Hanna came upon a copy of Jigsaw in 1989 and found resonance with Vail s writing 42 46 Hanna began to contribute to the zine submitting interviews to Jigsaw while on tour with Viva Knieval in 1990 42 47 In Jigsaw Vail wrote about angry grrls combining the word girls with a powerful growl 22 Some issues of Jigsaw have been archived at Harvard University as a research resource along with other counterculture zines 48 After touring for two months in summer 1990 Hanna s band Viva Knievel called it quits 47 Hanna then began collaborating with Vail after attending a performance of The Go Team and recognizing Vail as the mastermind behind Jigsaw zine 49 Dresch later started a record label under the name Chainsaw and formed the queercore band Team Dresch In Chainsaw 2 she wrote Right now maybe Chainsaw is about Frustration Frustration in music Frustration in living in being a girl in being a homo in being a misfit of any sort Which is where this whole punk rock thing came from in the first place 35 Molly Neuman from D C and Allison Wolfe from Olympia met in fall 1989 while living next door to each other in dorms at the University of Oregon in Eugene Oregon and they traveled to Olympia on weekends 42 50 They first read Vail s zine Jigsaw in January 1990 and around the same time met Hanna 50 While on winter break 1990 91 Neuman returned to Washington D C where her family lived and created the first issue of the zine Girl Germs 37 42 50 Corin Tucker came up with the band name Heavens to Betsy in Eugene during the summer of 1990 and moved to Olympia that fall to attend The Evergreen State College 42 51 Kathleen Hanna and her friends Tobi Vail and Kathi Wilcox who were also studying at Evergreen recruited Billy Karren to form Bikini Kill in fall 1990 42 Neuman and Wolfe played their first show on Valentine s Day 1991 at the North Shore Surf Club in Olympia after Johnson invited them to perform on a bill with Bikini Kill and Some Velvet Sidewalk 42 50 While working on a documentary film about the Olympia music scene Tucker went to this show and interviewed Neuman and Wolfe 50 Hanna Vail and Wilcox collaborated on a feminist zine titled Bikini Kill for their first tours in 1991 49 52 The Riot Grrrl movement believed in girls actively engaging in cultural production creating their own music and fanzines rather than following existing materials The bands associated with Riot Grrrl used their music to express feminist and anti racist viewpoints Bikini Kill Bratmobile and Heavens to Betsy created songs with extremely personal lyrics that dealt with topics such as rape incest and eating disorders 53 54 Jenny Toomey and Hanna had known each other as young teens while attending the same D C area junior high school 55 Toomey co founded the indie rock label Simple Machines with Kristin Thomson in early 1990 and they ran the label out of a punk group house in Arlington Virginia They shared the house with Positive Force activists before moving into their own group house in Arlington 56 Toomey visited Olympia during fall 1990 where she formed My New Boyfriend with Tobi Vail Aaron Stauffer from Seaweed and Christina Calle 57 Upon returning to Arlington Toomey and Thomson formed the indie rock band Tsunami The third issue of Vail s zine Jigsaw published in 1991 after she spent time in Washington D C was subtitled angry grrrl zine 42 In spring 1991 Cheslow was living in San Francisco and she received letters from Ian MacKaye and Nation of Ulysses Tim Green informing her about Bikini Kill and angry grrrl zines 42 That spring 1991 Neuman and Wolfe spent spring break in D C and formed Bratmobile there with Erin Smith Christina Billotte of Autoclave and Jen Smith 42 Bikini Kill toured with Nation of Ulysses in May June 1991 converging in D C with Bratmobile that summer 35 42 It was here that Neuman and Wolfe created the first issue of riot grrrl zine 35 While Bikini Kill and Bratmobile band members were in D C during summer 1991 a meeting was held with women from the D C area to discuss how to address sexism in the punk scene These women were inspired by recent anti racist riots in D C and they wanted to start a girl riot against a society they felt offered no validation of women s experiences 17 The first riot grrrl meeting was organized by Kathleen Hanna and Jenny Toomey and it was held at the Positive Force group house in Arlington Virginia 56 58 Hanna later said We had to go to a Positive Force meeting first I d never had a pitch meeting before But I was doing a pitch meeting for why they should let us use their house for this all women s radical feminist community organizing meeting 56 In August 1991 many of these individuals gathered at the International Pop Underground Convention in Olympia The first night of the event became known as Girl Night 59 Tucker played her first show that night on guitar and vocals with Heavens to Betsy and Tracy Sawyer on drums 51 59 Writing later about that summer Melissa Klein Wolfe s housemate at the time said Young women s anger and questioning fomented and smoldered until it became an all out gathering of momentum toward action Bikini Kill promoted Revolution Girl Style Now and Stop the J Word Jealousy From Killing Girl Love 35 As this ideal spread via band tours zines and word of mouth riot grrrl chapters sprang up around the country 35 Bikini Kill edit Main article Bikini Kill Kathleen Hanna Tobi Vail and Kathi Wilcox were all studying at The Evergreen State College in Olympia Washington during the late 1980s Hanna worked at Reko Muse a small collective art gallery that would frequently host local bands to play shows between art exhibitions There she met Vail after booking her band the Go Team 60 At the same time Vail was writing Jigsaw zine and working with friend Wilcox Vail wrote at the time in Jigsaw I feel completely left out of the realm of everything that is so important to me And I know that this is partly because punk rock is for and by boys mostly and partly because punk rock of this generation is coming of age in a time of mindless career goal bands 61 With Billy Karren Bikini Kill self released a cassette of demos during summer 1991 titled Revolution Girl Style Now Hanna Vail and Wilcox also began collaboration on Bikini Kill zine during their first tours in 1991 49 52 The band wrote songs collaboratively and encouraged a female centric environment at their shows urging women to come to the front of the stage and handing out lyric sheets Bikini Kill made it their goal to inspire more women to join the male dominated punk scene 62 Hanna would also stage dive into the crowds to personally remove male hecklers who would often verbally and physically assault her during shows 63 However the band s reach did include a large male audience in addition to the female target audience 63 nbsp Kathleen Hanna in 1996After releasing the Bikini Kill EP on the indie label Kill Rock Stars in 1992 Bikini Kill began to establish their audience Members of Bikini Kill also began to collaborate with other high profile musicians including Joan Jett whose music Hanna has described as an early example of the riot grrrl aesthetic 64 Jett produced the single New Radio Rebel Girl for the band after members of Bikini Kill heard Activity Grrrl a song Jett wrote about the band 65 Bikini Kill s debut album Pussy Whipped released in 1993 included the song Rebel Girl Rebel Girl has become one of Bikini Kill s signature songs as well as a widely recognized anthem for the riot grrrl movement 66 67 While the unforgettable anthem as Robert Christgau calls it 68 never charted due to its independent release it has received widespread critical acclaim It has been called a classic 69 and praised as part of the most vital rock n roll of the era 70 Bikini Kill s second album Reject All American was released in 1996 and the band broke up the next year 71 Despite retrospective acclaim at the time the band was criticized for excluding men and even Rolling Stone described Bikini Kill s first album as yowling and moronic nag unto vomit tantrums 27 72 My joke is always like I didn t just hit the glass ceiling I pressed my naked breasts up against it Hanna said of that time 27 Bikini Kill eventually called for a media blackout due to their perceived misrepresentation of the movement by the media 73 Their pioneer reputation endures but as Hanna recalls Bikini Kill was very vilified during the 90s by so many people and hated by so many people and I think that that s been kind of written out of the history People were throwing chains at our heads people hated us and it was really really hard to be in that band 74 Bratmobile edit Main article Bratmobile nbsp Bratmobile in 1994 Hailing from Eugene Oregon Bratmobile was a first generation riot grrrl band that became the second most prominent founding voice of the riot grrrl movement In 1990 University of Oregon students Allison Wolfe and Molly Neuman collaborated on feminist zine Girl Germs with Washington D C s Jen Smith touching on sexism in their local music scenes 61 We were very encouraged by people like Tobi and Kathleen in Olympia and we were like Oh let s do a band let s do radio we wanna sic have an all girl radio show 11 During spring 1991 Erin Smith Christina Billotte of Autoclave and Jen Smith no relation to Erin joined Wolfe and Neuman in Bratmobile when the latter two temporarily relocated to Washington D C Neuman and Erin Smith were previously introduced at a Nation of Ulysses show in Washington D C in December 1990 by mutual friend Calvin Johnson 50 Jen Smith had written in a letter to Wolfe We need to start a girl RIOT 61 75 Jen Smith proposed they collaborate with members of Bikini Kill on a zine called Girl Riot When Neuman began the zine she changed its title to riot grrrl providing a networking forum for young women in the wider music scene and giving the movement its name 61 Erin Smith Jen Smith Billotte Wolfe and Neuman released only one tape together titled Bratmobile DC 76 77 Thereafter Bratmobile became a trio with Wolfe Neuman and Erin Smith They played their first show together as Bratmobile in July 1991 with Neuman on drums Erin Smith on guitar and Wolfe on vocals 50 Between 1991 and 1994 Bratmobile released the album Pottymouth and EP The Real Janelle on Kill Rock Stars as well as The Peel Session 78 Bratmobile toured with Heavens to Betsy in 1992 and broke up in 1994 78 International Pop Underground Convention edit Main article International Pop Underground Convention From August 20 25 1991 K Records held an indie music festival in Olympia called the International Pop Underground Convention or IPU 79 80 81 82 83 A promotional poster reads As the corporate ogre expands its creeping influence on the minds of industrialized youth the time has come for the International Rockers of the World to convene in celebration of our grand independence Hangman hipsters new mod rockers sidestreet walkers scooter mounted dream girls punks teds the instigators of the Love Rock Explosion the editors of every angry grrrl zine the plotters of youth rebellion in every form the midwestern librarians and Scottish ski instructors who live by night all are setting aside August 20 25 1991 as the time 36 A mostly all female bill on the first night called Love Rock Revolution Girl Style Now and later simply Girl Night signaled a major step in the movement 79 80 81 82 59 The night was organized by Lois Maffeo KAOS DJ Michelle Noel who later organized the first Yoyo A Go Go in 1994 and Margaret Doherty 79 The lineup featured Maffeo Tobi Vail solo Christina Billotte solo Bratmobile Heavens to Betsy Nikki McClure Jean Smith of Mecca Normal 7 Year Bitch Kicking Giant Rose Melberg Kreviss I Scream Truck the Spinanes and two side projects of Kathleen Hanna Suture with Sharon Cheslow of Chalk Circle DC s first all women punk band and Dug E Bird of Beefeater and the Wondertwins with Tim Green of Nation of Ulysses 79 81 82 It was here that so many zinester people who d only known each other from networking mail or talking on the phone finally met and were brought together by an entire night of music dedicated to for and by women 51 An exceptionally large number of independent bands played and collaborated within the Olympia music scene The convention also featured bands such as Bikini Kill Nation of Ulysses Unwound L7 the Fastbacks Shadowy Men on a Shadowy Planet Girl Trouble The Pastels Seaweed Scrawl Jad Fair Thee Headcoats Steve Fisk Tsunami Fugazi Sleepyhead The Mummies and spoken word artist Juliana Luecking 79 83 This convention demonstrated a new relationship between audience and performers dismantling the power dynamic of the past for instance voicing anger at people harassing the female performers 84 Spread of North America riot grrrl edit Exposure to Bikini Kill and then Bratmobile inspired other riot grrrl factions to spring up around the United States and Canada Women in other regional punk music scenes across North America were encouraged to form their own bands and start their own zines 11 While Bikini Kill amongst other bands frequently avoided attention from mainstream media outlets due to the fear that riot grrrl would be co opted by corporate enterprises in the few interviews they did take they often made the movement out to be bigger than it was claiming the music scene existed in cities far beyond its actual scope This encouraged feminists to seek out said scenes and when they couldn t find them they created them on their own further broadening riot grrrl s scope 59 From July 31 to August 2 1992 the first Riot Grrrl Convention brought people together in Washington D C for a weekend of performances and workshops on topics such as rape sexuality racism domestic violence and self defense 35 37 A promotional flier reads Calling all grrrls and women The riot grrrls in and around Washington DC are organizing a three day riot grrrl convention this summer We invite all grrrl and feminist bands and performers grrrl fanzine writers and energetic grrrls and boys from across the country to contribute their skills energy anger creativity and curiosity We will be having at least three shows as well as workshops on everything from self defense to how to run a soundboard and how to lay out a zine Plus there will be a lot of time to talk with other women about how we fit or don t fit in the punk community 85 By 1994 riot grrrl had been discovered by the mainstream and Bikini Kill were increasingly referred to as pioneers of the movement 37 These bands credited with establishing the subculture of riot grrrl resisted being co opted as heads of the movement broadly 86 Dedicated to a DIY ethos bands and artists encouraged grrrls to challenge hierarchies and self produce work relating to their own experiences and identities 87 English riot grrrl edit As Bikini Kill s music and zines spread throughout England in 1991 92 bands formed and were quick to embrace riot grrrl 3 England had previously spawned such influential all female or female fronted punk bands as X Ray Spex The Slits and The Raincoats that provided inspiration 3 13 Huggy Bear formed in 1991 calling themselves girl boy revolutionaries in reference to both their political philosophy and the gender makeup of their band and were based in Brighton and London 3 13 88 89 90 Their debut EP was released in 1992 and in the same year they began working closely with Bikini Kill as riot grrrl s popularity peaked on both sides of the Atlantic 3 This culminated in a 1993 split album on Catcall Records Huggy Bear and Kill Rock Stars Bikini Kill called Our Troubled Youth Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah the names of the Huggy Bear and Bikini Kill sides respectively 89 91 Huggy Bear received widespread national attention after performing their third single Her Jazz a split release between Catcall and Wiiija Records on The Word in 1993 3 90 91 Kill Rock Stars had been co founded in Olympia by Slim Moon and Tinuviel Sampson while Catcall was founded by former Manchester punk zine City Fun writer Liz Naylor 92 93 Naylor had met Bikini Kill s Kathy Wilcox by chance while they were each traveling in Europe in 1991 and Wilcox sent Naylor music and the first issues of Riot Grrrl and Jigsaw zines during their subsequent correspondence 93 Skinned Teen formed in London in 1992 when they were around 14 years old They were included in British filmmaker Lucy Thane s documentary of the 1993 Bikini Kill Huggy Bear UK tour titled It Changed My Life Bikini Kill In The U K the film also included The Raincoats and queercore band Sister George 3 91 92 93 94 95 96 Thane from Sheffield had previously met the Raincoats Ana da Silva at a Hole show after Hole covered a Raincoats song 93 Thane filmed Bikini Kill and Huggy Bear for the entirety of their 1993 tour using borrowed film and video equipment 93 Naylor was tour manager 93 It Changed My Life premiered in 1993 at The Kitchen in New York City during a film program curated by filmmaker Jill Reiter 93 UK zines that wrote about riot grrrl at the time included Girlfrenzy and Ablaze 91 Decline and later developments edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message By the mid nineties riot grrrl had severely splintered Many within the movement felt that the mainstream media had completely misrepresented their message and that the politically radical aspects of riot grrrl had been subverted by the likes of the Spice Girls and their girl power message or co opted by ostensibly women centered bands though sometimes with only one female performer per band and festivals like Lilith Fair 97 nbsp Bikini Kill performing in 2019Of the original riot grrrl bands Bratmobile Heavens to Betsy and Huggy Bear had split in 1994 Excuse 17 and most of the UK bands had split by 1995 and Bikini Kill and Emily s Sassy Lime formed in Southern California in 1993 released their last records in 1996 However Team Dresch were active as late as 1998 the Gossip were active from 1999 and Bratmobile reformed in 2000 Perhaps most prolific of all Sleater Kinney were active from 1994 to 2006 releasing seven albums 98 99 Corin Tucker Heavens to Betsy and Carrie Brownstein Excuse 17 had formed Sleater Kinney in Olympia 100 Many of the women involved in riot grrrl are still active in creating politically charged music Kathleen Hanna went on to found the electro feminist post punk protest pop group Le Tigre and later the Julie Ruin Kathi Wilcox joined the Casual Dots with Christina Billotte of Slant 6 and Tobi Vail formed Spider and the Webs Sleater Kinney reformed the band in 2014 after an 8 year hiatus and have released three albums since while Bratmobile reunited to release two albums before Allison Wolfe began singing with other all women bands Cold Cold Hearts and Partyline Molly Neuman went on to play with New York punk band Love Or Perish and run her own indie label called Simple Social Graces Discos as well as co owning Lookout Records and managing the Donnas Ted Leo Some Girls and the Locust Kaia Wilson of Team Dresch and multimedia artist Tammy Rae Carland went on to form the now defunct Mr Lady Records which released albums by the Butchies Electrelane Kaia Wilson Le Tigre Sarah Dougher Sextional Tami Hart The Haggard TJO TKO The Movies V for Vendetta The Quails 101 102 Bikini Kill played a string of shows in 2019 103 to present 104 Feminism and riot grrrl culture editRiot grrrl culture is often associated with third wave feminism which also grew rapidly during the same early nineties timeframe The movement of third wave feminism focused less on laws and the political process and more on individual identity The movement of third wave feminism is said to have arisen out of the realization that women are of many colors ethnicities nationalities religions and cultural backgrounds 105 While multiracial feminist movements have existed prior to the third wave the proliferation of technology during the early nineties allowed for easier networking amongst feminist groups Riot grrrls used media spectacle to their advantage crafting works from oppositional technologies such as zines videography and music 106 The riot grrrl movement allowed women their own space to create music and make political statements about the issues they were facing in the punk rock community and in society They used their music and publications to express their views on issues such as patriarchy double standards against women rape domestic abuse sexuality and female empowerment 107 An undated typewritten Bikini Kill tour flier answers the question What is Riot grrrl with Riot Grrrl is Because we girls want to create mediums that speak to US We are tired of boy band after boy band boy zine after boy zine boy punk after boy punk after boy Because we need to talk to each other Communication and inclusion are key We will never know if we don t break the code of silence Because in every form of media we see ourselves slapped decapitated laughed at objectified raped trivialized pushed ignored stereotyped kicked scorned molested silenced invalidated knifed shot choked and killed Because a safe space needs to be created for girls where we can open our eyes and reach out to each other without being threatened by this sexist society and our day to day bullshit 108 The riot grrrl movement encouraged women to develop their own place in a male dominated punk scene Punk shows had come to be understood as places where women could make their way to the front of the crowd into the mosh pit but had to fight ten times harder because they were female and sexually charged violence such as groping and rape had been reported 109 In contrast riot grrrl bands would often actively invite members of the audience to talk about their personal experiences with sensitive issues such as sexual abuse pass out lyric sheets to everyone in the audience and often demand that the mosh boys move to the back or side to allow space in front for the girls in the audience 64 The bands weren t always enthusiastically received at shows by male audience members Punk Planet editor Daniel Sinker wrote in We Owe You Nothing The vehemence fanzines large and small reserved for riot grrrl and Bikini Kill in particular was shocking The punk zine editors use of bitches cunts man haters and dykes was proof positive that sexism was still strong in the punk scene 110 Kathi Wilcox said in a fanzine interview I ve been in a state of surprise for several years about this very thing I don t know why so called punk rockers are so threatened by a little shake up of the truly boring dynamic of the standard show atmosphere How fresh is the idea of fifty sweaty hardcore boys slamming into each other or jumping on each others heads Granted it s kind of cool to be on stage and have action in the front much more inspiring than to look out at a crowd of zombies but so often the survival of the fittest principle is in operation in the pit and what girl wants to go up against a pack of Rollins boys who usually only want to be extra mean to her anyway just to make her prove her place in the pit This was the case when I was first going to shows and it s sad that things haven t changed at all since But it would have been so cool if at one of these shows someone onstage would have said hey let s have more girls up in the front just so I could have had more company and girls over to side could have seen better been in the action So yeah we do encourage girls to the front and sometimes when shows have gotten really violent like when we were in England we had to ask the boys to move to the side or the back because it was just too fucking scary for us after several attacks and threats to face another sea of hostile boy faces right in the front 111 Kathleen Hanna later wrote It was also super schizo to play shows where guys threw stuff at us called us cunts and yelled take it off during our set and then the next night perform for throngs of amazing girls singing along to every lyric and cheering after every song 60 Many men were supporters of riot grrrl culture and acts Calvin Johnson and Slim Moon have been instrumental in publishing riot grrrl bands on the labels they founded K Records and Kill Rock Stars respectively Alec Empire of Atari Teenage Riot said I was totally into the riot grrrl music I see it as a very important form of expression I learned a lot from that way more maybe than from male punk rock 112 Dave Grohl and Kurt Cobain dated Kathleen Hanna and Tobi Vail also respectively and often played with Bikini Kill even after splitting with them Kurt was a big fan of the Slits and even convinced the Raincoats to reform He once said The future of rock belongs to women 113 Many riot grrrl bands included male band members such as Billy Karren of Bikini Kill or Jon Slade and Chris Rawley of Huggy Bear The New York Historical Society s documentation on Women amp the American Story said that the riot grrrl movement struggled to recognize intersectionality and therefore many women of color left when they felt their voices weren t being heard 114 In 1997 punk musician Tamar kali Brown created Sista Grrrl by and for Black women and girls in response to the marginalization of women of color in riot grrrl 115 Sista Grrrls was the name for Tamar kali s New York punk group with three other Black women Simi Stone Honeychild Coleman and Maya Sokora 114 These four organized a series of punk shows known as Sista Grrrl Riots with Black women and girls who were in bands or performed solo 116 The Slits Ari Up opened one of the riots as a Sista Grrrl ally 116 and Honeychild Coleman later toured as guitarist with the reformed Slits in 2010 117 Scholars have argued that riot grrrl remains relevant on a global scale because it engages with everyday politics or the ways that people in their day to day activities participate in or experience power dynamics 118 It allows grrrls to connect their interests and contemporary lives to urgent political issues in personal and subversive ways 119 One way riot grrrl achieved this was through language that centered young women and girls as political subjects with agency and power in a way that broke away from historical models of feminism and radical speech 120 This history in the making approach aligned well with riot grrrl s devotion to DIY 120 Zines and publications edit Even as the Seattle area rock scene came to international mainstream media attention riot grrrl remained a willfully underground phenomenon 108 Most musicians shunned the major record labels devotedly working instead with indie labels such as Kill Rock Stars K Records Slampt Piao Records Simple Machines Catcall WIIIJA and Chainsaw Records Riot grrrl s momentum was also hugely supported by an explosion of creativity in homemade cut and paste xeroxed collage zines that covered a variety of feminist topics frequently attempting to draw out the political implications of intensely personal experiences in a privately public space 108 Zines often described experiences with sexism mental illness body image and eating disorders sexual abuse racism rape discrimination stalking domestic violence incest homophobia and sometimes vegetarianism Grrrl zine editors are collectively engaged in forms of writing and writing instruction that challenge both dominant notions of the author as an individualized bodiless space and notions of feminism as primarily an adult political project 121 These zines were archived by zinewiki com and Riot Grrrl Press started in Washington DC in 1992 by Erika Reinstein amp May Summer 122 Bands often attempted to reappropriate derogatory phrases like cunt bitch dyke and slut writing them proudly on their skin with lipstick or fat markers Kathleen Hanna was writing slut on her stomach at shows as early as 1992 intentionally fusing feminist art and activist practices 20 Many of the women involved with queercore were also interested in riot grrrl and zines such as Chainsaw by Donna Dresch Sister Nobody Jane Gets A Divorce and I heart Amy Carter by Tammy Rae Carland embody both movements There were also national conventions like in Washington D C 35 37 or the Pussystock festival in New York City as well as various subsequent indie documentaries like Don t Need You the Herstory of Riot Grrrl Other riot grrrl zines such as Ramdasha Bikceem s GUNK started in 1990 when she was 15 focused on the intersections of punk gender and racism 116 Bikceem from New Jersey had found out about riot grrrl zines after a friend became Tobi Vail s roommate in Olympia Bikceem s band Gunk performed at the first Riot Grrrl Convention in D C in 1992 123 124 In GUNK 4 Bikceem wrote about the politics of being a Black grrrl I ll go out somewhere with my friends who all look equally as weird as me but say we get hassled by the cops for skating or something That cop is going to remember my face a lot clearer than say one of my white girlfriends 116 Mimi Thi Nguyen s Slant and Sabrina Margarita Alcantara Tan s Bamboo Girl critiqued riot grrrl from the perspective of Asian American girls 116 125 126 In 1997 Nguyen published the compilation zine Evolution of a Race Riot 125 In the mid 1990s zines were also published on the Internet as e zines 127 Websites such as Gurl com and ChickClick were created out of dissatisfaction of media available to women and parodied content found in mainstream teen and women s magazines 128 129 Both Gurl com and ChickClick had a message board and free web hosting services where users could also create and contribute their own content which in turn created a reciprocal relationship where women could also be seen as creators rather than consumers 127 130 154 Starting during the fall of 2010 the Riot Grrrl Collection has been housed at New York University s Fales Library and Special Collections as The Fales Riot Grrrl Collection The collection s primary mandate is to collect unique materials that provide documentation of the creative process of individuals and the chronology of the Riot Grrrl movement overall 131 Kathleen Hanna Molly Neuman Allison Wolfe Ramdasha Bikceem Johanna Fateman Becca Albee co founder of Excuse 17 Lucy Thane Tammy Rae Carland and Mimi Thi Nguyen have donated primary source material 131 The collection is the brainchild of Lisa Darms Senior Archivist at the Fales Library According to Jenna Freedman a librarian who maintains a zine collection at Barnard College It s just essential to preserve the activist voices in their own unmediated work especially because of the media blackout that they called for Kathleen Hanna while understanding no collection can replicate the concert experience feels the collection is a safe place that will be free from feminist erasure 131 132 Media misconceptions editAt first most Riot Grrrls were open to using the media as a way to spread the word to other girls Shortly thereafter however feeling that they had been misrepresented trivialized commercialized and made into a new fad and trend the Riot Grrrls changed their minds 133 As media attention increasingly focused on the emerging grunge and alternative rock scene in the mid nineties the term Riot Grrrl was often used as a catchall for female fronted bands and applied to less political alternative rock acts While many female centric or all women rock bands such as Frightwig Hole 7 Year Bitch Babes in Toyland the Breeders the Gits Lunachicks Liz Phair Veruca Salt and L7 shared similar DIY tactics and feminist ideologies with the riot grrrl movement not all of these acts self identified with the riot grrrl label 3 13 It used to frustrate me when posters would say all girl band or riot grrrl recalled L7 s Donita Sparks We cheered loudly when we went to Italy it said Rock from the USA 134 Courtney Love in particular felt the need to disassociate with Riot Grrrl as a whole As supportive as I am of them there s a faction that says We don t know how to play but we re not going to follow your male measured idea of what good is Look good is Led Zeppelin II That s fucking good And I m not going to sit here and say you re a good band when you suck They re like But we re entitled to suck Really We work so hard to get good at what we do without covering up who we are as women 40 To their chagrin in 1992 riot grrrls found themselves in the media spotlight of magazines from Seventeen to Newsweek 135 136 Newsweek s headline was Riot Girl is feminism with a loud happy face dotting the i and USA Today ran a headline saying From hundreds of once pink frilly bedrooms comes the young feminist revolution 37 Fallout from the media coverage led to resignations from the movement including Jessica Hopper a teenage music critic who was at the center of the Newsweek article 137 Hopper later the author of The First Collection of Criticism by a Living Female Rock Critic said Some people were really upset because I talked to mainstream media about what I felt riot grrrl was At the time there was much more of a chasm between the underground and the mainstream and people didn t want mainstream girls showing up to this and I just thought I didn t want to be part of something that wasn t for all women 137 To ease tension Kathleen Hanna called a media blackout for that year In an essay from January 1994 that had been included in the double compact disc release of Bikini Kill s first two albums Tobi Vail responded to media misrepresentation of Bikini Kill and riot grrrl in general One huge misconception for instance that has been repeated over and over again in magazines we have never spoken to and also by those who believe these sources without checking things out themselves is that Bikini Kill is the definitive riot girl band We are not in anyway leaders of or authorities on the Riot Girl movement In fact as individuals we have each had different experiences with feelings on opinions of and varying degrees of involvement with Riot Girl and though we totally respect those who still feel that label is important and meaningful to them we have never used that term to describe ourselves AS A BAND As individuals we respect and utilize and subscribe to a variety of different aesthetics strategies and beliefs both political and punk wise some of which are probably considered riot girl 138 Sharon Cheslow stated in EMP s Riot Grrrl Retrospective documentary There were a lot of very important ideas that I think the mainstream media couldn t handle so it was easier to focus on the fact that these were girls who were wearing barrettes in their hair or writing slut on their stomach Corin Tucker stated I think it was deliberate that we were made to look like we were just ridiculous girls parading around in our underwear They refused to do serious interviews with us they misprinted what we had to say they would take our articles and our fanzines and our essays and take them out of context We wrote a lot about sexual abuse and sexual assault for teenagers and young women I think those are really important concepts that the media never addressed 139 Other female fronted punk bands such as Spitboy were less comfortable with the childhood centered issues of much of the riot grrrl aesthetic but nonetheless dealt explicitly with feminist and related issues as well 140 Lesbian centric Queercore 141 bands such as Fifth Column Tribe 8 Adickdid the Third Sex Excuse 17 and Team Dresch wrote songs dealing with matters specific to women and their position in society exploring issues such as both sexual 142 and gender identity 143 A documentary film put together by a San Diego psychiatrist Dr Lisa Rose Apramian Not Bad for a Girl explored some of these issues in interviews with many of the musicians in the riot grrrl scene at the time 144 Criticism editThe Riot Grrrl movement received criticism for not being inclusive enough Emily White wrote for the Chicago Reader in 1992 Riot Girls are often accused of being separatist they want to form a life away from men and invent girl culture 145 One major argument was that the movement focused on middle class white women alienating other kinds of women 146 147 148 This criticism emerged early in the movement In 1993 Ramdasha Bikceem wrote in her zine Gunk Riot grrrl calls for change but I question who it s including I see Riot Grrrl growing very closed to a very few i e white middle class punk girls 108 Riot grrrl especially in the 1990s focused heavily on the use of the body as message boards for public demonstration 149 Riot grrrl faced similar issues as the original punk scene it was protesting against in terms of its lack of intersectionality 150 Black women specifically did not feel the counterculture was a safe space to express their lived experiences anger and art 150 Feeling excluded from the riot grrrl scene Sista Grrrl Riots were created in the late 1990s by Tamar kali Brown Simi Stone Honeychild Coleman and Maya Sokora 150 Sista Grrrls created a space by and for Black women to freely express themselves through punk The Sista Grrrl movement was foundational to contemporary Afro punk 150 Tamar kali later said I was a different type of girl I was hearing what they were saying but I was living in an environment where people were getting stabbed Riot Grrrl felt like a bubblegum expression 116 Musician Courtney Love criticized the movement for being too doctrinaire and censorious Look you ve got these highly intelligent imperious girls but who told them it was their undeniable American right not to be offended Being offended is part of being in the real world I m offended every time I see George Bush on TV 151 Some have suggested that while riot grrrl bands worked to ensure their shows were safe spaces in which women could find solidarity and create their own subculture some higher profile riot grrrl bands participated in the Michigan Womyn s Music Festival a trans exclusionary event that had a womyn born womyn policy Former members of Le Tigre saw protests at their shows for having participated in the festival in 2001 and 2005 152 However Kathleen Hanna stated directly that she supported trans rights on her own Twitter account 153 Additionally JD Samson another former member of Le Tigre is genderfluid 154 Kathleen Hanna acknowledged some of these critiques in her zine April Fools Day When describing her traumas related to addiction she said It seems to me that each addict functions within his her one context in terms of race gender location class personality access etc so it would be ridiculous for me to try and write a manifesto or a universal account of how addiction works 155 Hanna followed a legacy of privilege checking in riot grrrl culture and the community commitment to differentiate between personal experiences and trauma from systemic oppression when necessary 86 Riot grrrl activists have often tended to create themselves into marginalized subjects to strengthen their credibility within the subculture without recognizing their positionality 86 Legacy and resurgence edit nbsp Carrie Brownstein of Excuse 17 and Sleater Kinney in 2005In the foreword to the 2007 book Riot Grrrl Revolution Girl Style Now Beth Ditto writes of riot grrrl A movement formed by a handful of girls who felt empowered who were angry hilarious and extreme through and for each other Built on the floors of strangers living rooms tops of Xerox machines snail mail word of mouth and mixtapes riot grrrl reinvented punk 156 Additionally Ditto writes about riot grrrl s influence on her personally and on her music She muses on the meaning of the movement for her generation Until I found riot grrrl or riot grrrl found me I was just another Gloria Steinem NOW feminist trying to take a stand in shop class Now I am a musician a writer a whole person 156 Many women write to Hanna in hopes of reviving the Riot Grrrl Movement Hanna says Don t revive it make something better 157 In 2010 Girls to the Front The True Story of the Riot Grrrl Revolution became the first published history of the riot grrrl movement 158 159 The author had also attended Riot Grrrl meetings herself 160 As of 2019 there were approximately ten weekly riot grrrl meetings held nationwide and bands multiplying faster than can be counted 4 18 nbsp The Regrettes formed in 2015 and merge riot grrrl with elements of doo wop 161 In 2013 Astria Suparak and Ceci Moss curated Alien She an exhibition examining the impact of Riot Grrrl on artists and cultural producers Alien She focuses on seven people whose visual art practices were informed by their contact with Riot Grrrl Many of them work in multiple disciplines such as sculpture installation video documentary film photography drawing printmaking new media social practice curation music writing and performance a reflection of the movement s artistic diversity and mutability 162 163 164 It opened September 2013 at the Miller Gallery at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and ran through February the following year It visited four subsequent art spaces Vox Populi in Philadelphia Pennsylvania March April 2014 Yerba Buena Center for the Arts San Francisco October 2014 January 2015 Orange County Museum of Art Newport Beach California February May 2015 and Pacific Northwest College of Art 511 Gallery and the Museum of Contemporary Craft in Portland Oregon September 3 2015 January 9 2016 165 The term grrrl or grrl itself has since been co opted or used by agencies as diverse as advocacy on behalf of the Electronic Frontier Foundation GRRL POWER 1 0 5 PACK Memetics for the Ladies 166 and a roller derby league in Singapore 167 The resurgence of riot grrrl is clearly visible in fourth wave feminists worldwide who cite the original movement as an interest or influence on their lives and or their work 168 169 Some of them are self proclaimed riot grrrls while others consider themselves simply admirers or fans In an age where Internet is the most accessible platform for individuals to express themselves the fourth wave riot grrrl community has risen in popularity in recent years Not only do these online platforms capture discussion regarding larger topics of intersectional oppression but they also provide space for budding feminists to express smaller issues such as the successes and challenges of their everyday lives Young feminists have harnessed the internet as a forum for self determinism and genuine open expression a core part of the riot grrrl message that allows young adults room to decide for themselves who they are 23 In January 2019 Bikini Kill announced their reunion tour for the first time since their last show in Tokyo 22 years ago The Guardian stated in an article about reunion that the once underground riot grrrl movement has gone mainstream due to word of mouth from celebrities and the increased attention to other modern feminist developments such as the Me Too movement In the same article drummer Tobi Vail stated her frustration with lack of social progress related to feminism 103 These same issues still exist being a woman in public is very intense whether it s in the public eye or just walking down the street at night by yourself 103 Vail also explained the aims of their reunion that women discover the band and understand their history especially those who did not have the opportunity to hear them during the original riot grrrl movement We re doing it because we want to be a part of this conversation about what feminism is in this moment 103 Global proliferation edit nbsp Pussy Riot Photo by Denis Bochkarev Since its beginnings the riot grrrl movement was attractive to many women in varied cultures Its spread across the world established bands in Brazil Paraguay Israel Australia Malaysia and Europe 170 and its globalization was also aided by the distribution of zines across Asia Europe and South America 171 The discovery of riot grrrl provided women across the globe with access to an outlet that challenged the dominant culture s attitudes toward the female body through a form of self expression 170 that previously was often inaccessible to women in non western nations 171 In addition to becoming a vehicle of expression for equality bands in the genre affected the status quo of the music industry by challenging the gender norms that favoured male musicians 172 One of the most well known bands to come out of the globalization of the riot grrrl movement is Pussy Riot a Russian group formed in 2011 who self identify as twenty first century Russian riot grrrls 171 173 Pussy Riot first came to popular media attention in 2012 when they staged a protest performance of Punk Prayer at the altar of Moscow s largest cathedral The song includes an appeal to the Virgin Mary to banish Putin 173 174 175 All three members of Pussy Riot were convicted of hooliganism and sentenced two years imprisonment 176 177 Pussy Riot performs music with themes of feminism LGBT rights and opposition to the policies of Russian president Vladimir Putin whom the group considers to be a dictator 171 173 178 See also edit nbsp feminism portal nbsp 1990s portalAll female band Bikini Kill But I m a Cheerleader C86 Foxcore Girl Germs Guerrilla Girls Girl power It Changed My Life Bikini Kill In The UK Kinderwhore Ladies and Gentlemen the Fabulous Stains List of all women bands List of riot grrrl bands The Punk Singer Punk ideology Queercore Radical Act Rock Against Sexism Tank Girl Women in musicReferences edit a b c Feliciano Steve the Riot Grrrl Movement New York Public Library It s Riot Grrrl Day in Boston 13 Songs to rock out to at work Sheknows com April 9 2015 Retrieved July 18 2016 a b c d e f g h i McDonnell Evelyn Vincentelli Elisabeth May 6 2019 Riot Grrrl United Feminism and Punk Here s an Essential Listening Guide The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 21 2021 a b c Riot Grrrl Map Google My Maps Retrieved March 16 2019 Garrison Ednie Kach 2000 U S Feminism Grrrl Style Youth Sub Cultures and the Technologics of the Third Wave Feminist Studies 26 1 142 doi 10 2307 3178596 JSTOR 3178596 When punk 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Group p 49 ISBN 978 0 8239 3400 3 Riot Grrrl Census riotgrrrlcensus tumblr com Retrieved March 16 2019 a b Wright Lindsay 2016 Do It Yourself Girl Power An Examination of the Riot Grrrl Subculture PDF James Madison Undergraduate Research Journal 3 56 S2CID 56339916 Archived from the original PDF on February 10 2020 a b c d Dunn Kevin C June 16 2014 Pussy Rioting International Feminist Journal of Politics 16 2 317 334 doi 10 1080 14616742 2014 919103 ISSN 1461 6742 S2CID 146989637 DOWNES JULIA January 11 2012 The Expansion of Punk Rock Riot Grrrl Challenges to Gender Power Relations in British Indie Music Subcultures Women s Studies 41 2 204 237 doi 10 1080 00497878 2012 636572 ISSN 0049 7878 S2CID 145226755 a b c O Flynn Kevin March 10 2012 Pussy Riot vs Vladimir Putin the feminist punk band jailed for cathedral protest The Guardian Retrieved October 30 2021 Rumens Carol August 20 2012 Pussy Riot s Punk Prayer is pure protest poetry The Guardian Retrieved October 30 2021 Tayler Jeffrey November 8 2012 What Pussy Riot s Punk Prayer Really Said The Atlantic Retrieved October 30 2021 Pussy Riot members jailed for two years for hooliganism BBC August 17 2012 Retrieved October 30 2021 Elder Miriam August 17 2012 Pussy Riot sentenced to two years in prison colony over anti Putin protest The Guardian Retrieved October 30 2021 Cadwalladr Carole July 28 2012 Pussy Riot will Vladimir Putin regret taking on Russia s cool punks The Observer ISSN 0029 7712 Retrieved June 3 2020 Further reading editGottlieb Joanne and Gayle Wald Smells Like Teen Spirit Riot Grrrls Revolution and Women in Independent Rock Microphone Fiends Youth Music and Youth Culture Eds Andrew Ross and Tricia Rose New York Routledge 1994 Kaltefleiter Caroline K 2016 Start your own revolution agency and action of the Riot Grrrl network International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 36 11 12 808 823 doi 10 1108 IJSSP 06 2016 0067 ISSN 0144 333X Kearney Mary Celeste Brought to You by Girl Power Riot Grrrl s Networked Media Economy Girls Make Media New York Routledge 2006 ISBN 0 415 97278 7 Kearney Mary Celeste Don t Need You Rethinking Identity Politics and Separatism from a Grrrl Perspective Youth Culture Identity in a Postmodern World Ed Jonathan Epstein Cambridge Blackwell 1998 ISBN 1557868506 Kearney Mary Celeste The Missing Links Riot Grrrl Feminism Lesbian Culture Sexing the Groove Popular Music and Gender Ed Sheila Whiteley New York Routledge 1997 ISBN 0 415 14670 4 Leonard Marion Feminism Subculture and Grrrl Power Sexing the Groove Popular Music and Gender Ed Sheila Whiteley New York Routledge 1997 ISBN 0 415 14670 4 Nguyen Mimi Thi Riot Grrrl Race and Revival Women amp Performance 22 2 3 2012 173 196 External links editThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references November 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Articles edit The 10 myths of Riot Grrrl Grrrl power by Laura Barton Riot Girl still relevant 20 years on by Jessica HopperDedicated Websites edit Riot Grrrl Collections at the Fales Special Collections at NYU Riot Grrrl International Chapters The Riot Grrrl Manifesto She Came to Riot Sophia Smith Collection zines collection at the Sophia Smith Collection Smith College Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Riot grrrl amp oldid 1216401685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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