Contents
Kagenna #1 (silk-screened cover) 101 Green things to do; Beyond Environmental Conflict; Women as practical Utopists; Hyperdelic Exploration; Artvark Interview; Garbage Ecology; Ten Key Values of the Green Movement; Jim Jute and the Night People; Tristam and Them comic.(24pp) out of print
Kagenna #2 (silk-screened cover) Reclaiming Celebration; Busking;Towards a Green South Africa by Jacklyn Cock; Dioxin Factsheet; Siyabona Theatre; The Word Becomes Cassette by William Levy; Tristam and Them comic.(28pp) out of print
Kagenna #3 Plastic Propaganda; Art and Change; Ozone- Friendly Might Just KillYou; Global Warming Factsheet; Camphill Bus; African Hip Hop interview; Fax for Freedom; Recycling and Toxics guide; The Kitchen Revolution; Beezy Bailey poster. (28pp + poster) R12.50
Kagenna #4 Do You Have to be White to be Green by Albie Sachs; Steve Newman's alternative reality; German Green party interview; Radical Radio; Disrupting Trivia and Tapping the Information Highway; The Reality of Meat; Hobos Recycle; CO-OP cutup; Kwangoma; P. Clark-Brown poster. (36pp) R13.50 Kagenna #5
Kagenna #5 Planetary Dance; Do Trees Have Rights? Albie Sachs; San Survival; Eco-Architecture; Power Crisis on the Cape Flats; Kicking the Automobile Habit; 25 Difficult things you can do to save the Earth; Mike van Graan interview;Indigenous Plant users outlawed; The Mad-Dogs of the Media, Justin Wells poster. (40pp)
Kagenna #6 Cyberpunk by Timothy Leary; Subversive Television; Bleeding by the Moon; Interconnectedness by Mike Cope; The History of Hemp; Permaculture; Benjamin Zephaniah interview; Street-kid Theatre; Tristam and Them comic; Jane Thompson poster. (40pp)
Read more about this topic: Kagenna Magazine
Famous quotes containing the word contents:
“Such as boxed
Their feelings properly, complete to tags
A box for dark men and a box for Other
Would often find the contents had been scrambled.”
—Gwendolyn Brooks (b. 1917)
“Conversation ... is like the table of contents of a dull book.... All the greatest subjects of human thought are proudly displayed in it. Listen to it for three minutes, and you ask yourself which is more striking, the emphasis of the speaker or his shocking ignorance.”
—Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (17831842)
“The permanence of all books is fixed by no effort friendly or hostile, but by their own specific gravity, or the intrinsic importance of their contents to the constant mind of man.”
—Ralph Waldo Emerson (18031882)