Propaganda 1982–2002

Dates

1982 1984 1986 1988 1990 1992 1994 1996 1999 2002

26 issues

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1982 #1

1983 #2

1984 #4

1985 #5

1986 #6

1986 #7

1986 #8

1987 #9

1988 #10

1989 #11

1989 #12

1990 #13

1990 #14

1990 #15

1991 #16

1991 #17

1992 #18

1992 #19

1993 #20

1994 #21

1995 #22

1996 #23

1998 #24

1999 #25

2001 #26

2002 #27

1982 Issue 1

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28 pages

1983 Issue 2

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36 pages

1984 Issue 4

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36 pages

1985 Issue 5

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40 pages

1986 Issue 6

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40 pages

1986 Issue 7

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40 pages

1986 Issue 8

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40 pages

1987 Issue 9

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44 pages

1988 Issue 10

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52 pages

1989 Issue 11

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40 pages

1989 Issue 12

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40 pages

1990 Issue 13

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44 pages

1990 Issue 14

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48 pages

1990 Issue 15

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48 pages

1991 Issue 16

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56 pages

1991 Issue 17

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48 pages

1992 Issue 18

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48 pages

1992 Issue 19

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56 pages

1993 Issue 20

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56 pages

1994 Issue 21

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48 pages

1995 Issue 22

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56 pages

1996 Issue 23

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56 pages

1998 Issue 24

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60 pages

1999 Issue 25

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72 pages

2001 Issue 26

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80 pages

2002 Issue 27

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100 pages

About this Publication

Issues:

26

Published:

1982–2002

Publisher:

Fred H. Berger

Location:

New Hyde Park, New York United States
Published during the 1980s and 1990s, Propaganda focused on all topics related to goth, including fashion, fetish gear, witchcraft, and literature, as well as music. Founded by the journalist and photographer Fred H. Berger in 1982, who was credited in some issues of the zine as “Propaganda Minister”, the zine included interviews with major musical artists, from Siouxsie and the Banshees to Bauhaus to The Cure, as well as with the American gothic novelist Anne Rice. Photographs, often taken by Berger, commonly featured androgynous young men and women in fetish gear. Given the number of alternative and underground genres associated with the goth aesthetic—ranging from industrial music and darkwave to neo-psychedelia and dream pop—Propaganda serves as a significant historical record of early alternative and indie music in general.

About this Publication

Issues:

26

Published:

1982–2002

Publisher:

Fred H. Berger

Location:

New Hyde Park, New York United States
Published during the 1980s and 1990s, Propaganda focused on all topics related to goth, including fashion, fetish gear, witchcraft, and literature, as well as music. Founded by the journalist and photographer Fred H. Berger in 1982, who was credited in some issues of the zine as “Propaganda Minister”, the zine included interviews with major musical artists, from Siouxsie and the Banshees to Bauhaus to The Cure, as well as with the American gothic novelist Anne Rice. Photographs, often taken by Berger, commonly featured androgynous young men and women in fetish gear. Given the number of alternative and underground genres associated with the goth aesthetic—ranging from industrial music and darkwave to neo-psychedelia and dream pop—Propaganda serves as a significant historical record of early alternative and indie music in general.