Rachel Jones guides us through Thomas Nashe and Cambridge’s world of cheap print

The red herring becomes the backbone of Nashe’s imaginary economyRyan Vowles for Varsity

“Head, body, tail and all of a red herring you shall have of me, if that will please you” (Thomas Nashe, Lenten Stuffe, 1599)

Slim, light, almost pocket-sized: the zine (from ‘magazine’) may come in a humble form, yet it harbours a dizzying kaleidoscope of student creativity, from poetry and essays to paintings and photography. Before I arrived at Cambridge, I had never heard of such a thing. But after a year of my English degree, I am beginning to recognise the important part that these publications play in the university’s arts scene.

“Unpretentious, open-minded, zines are thus places for practice and …

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