
This episode explores the role of RE/Search Publications in archiving underground and industrial subcultures—preserving voices, ideas, and practices that exist outside mainstream cultural narratives. Founded by V. Vale in San Francisco, RE/Search became a crucial platform for documenting experimental music, performance art, and countercultural movements.We trace its influential publications featuring figures such as Throbbing Gristle and SPK, where interviews, manifestos, and visual materials form a living archive of radical artistic practice. These works capture not only sound, but ideology—revealing how industrial culture engages with themes of power, technology, and identity.Historically, RE/Search functioned as a bridge between disparate underground scenes, connecting artists, thinkers, and audiences across geographic and disciplinary boundaries. Its DIY ethos and editorial rigor helped legitimize experimental practices often excluded from institutional recognition.This episode analyzes archiving as cultural act—where documentation becomes preservation, and preservation becomes resistance. Through history, publishing, and subcultural context, we explore how RE/Search shaped the way underground and industrial movements are remembered and understood.【Related Column】RE/Search: Magazines that record subcultures and their cultural influencehttps://monumental-movement.jp/en/Column-ReSearch/
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