Get Into Thing, the Legendary 1990s Black Queer Magazine 

The cult classic is now back in print with a facsimile edition of all 10 issues.

Some say disco died on July 12, 1979, when 50,000 white men and women turned out  in force for “Disco Demolition Night” at Chicago’s Comiskey Park.What began as racist,  homophobic rage against disco — a predominantly Black queer art form — invariably  ended up as a wholesale riot with few arrested for disorderly conduct.  

But disco never died, it just went underground and was reborn on the dance floor. By  the mid-1980s, Chicago emerged as the heartbeat of a new sound — house music — that  would take global nightlife by storm. But where disco was treated as a novelty and  farmed for profits, house music largely resisted co-optation by the music industry, it’s  influence inescapable yet unconstrained. 

By the end of the decade, house music had become a way of life. Love was the  message, and music it’s messenger, and those who heard it followed its call. Enter  Robert T. Ford, Trent Adkins, and Lawrence D. Warren, the masterminds behind Thing,  the legendary 1990s Black queer magazine that became a defining voice of the early  1990s scene. 

From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information

Hailing from Chicago’s fabled South Side, the triumvirate first came together in 1987 to  create Think Ink, a black and white broadsheet that ran for just two issues before the  funds dried up. The final issue pointed to the future in its glossary with a simple but  unmistakable word: “Thing: A person or Thing of incorrigible and unbearable  Fabulousness. As in the salutation, ‘Miss Thing!,’ or ‘Thing’s not buying it!’”  

Enough said. In November 1989, Thing magazine arrived with a simple promise: “She  Knows Who She Is”. Between 1989–1993, they published 10 issues before Ford’s death  from HIV/AIDS related causes brought the magazine to an end. In time, Adkins and  Warren would also pass.  

Over the years, the magazine became a cult classic that few have seen in full — until  now with the release of Thing, a bound facsimile edition of all 10 issues. Here it is,  Chicago’s finest mapping the blueprint of culture through the community that came  together through music at the very time it was been ravaged by AIDS. 

From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information

Can You Feel It  

Thing emerged amid the independent zine scene that flourished at the end of the  1980s among a new generation of artists, photographers, writers, designers, and  aspiring publishers who understood, as journalist AJ Liebling famously said, “Freedom  of the press is guaranteed only to those who own one.”

From the very first issue, Thing signaled the party had arrived. New voices jumped off  the page, deliciously candid and sparkling with life. It was like being on the dance floor,  in the kitchen, and sitting around the dinner table all at the same time, filled with wit and  wisdom delivered with effortless savoir faire.  

Thing was a tour de force without compare, a whirlwind of Black queer youth on the  cusp, some like RuPaul Charles going on to be a global powerhouse and others like  poet Essex Hemphill and filmmaker Marlon Riggs dying from AIDS in the mid-90s. At its  height Thing blossomed to 3,000 copies, proving the old adage about quality over  quantity standing the test of time. Readers feasted on the work of photographer Lyle  Ashton Harris and writers Dennis Cooper, Vaginal Davis, Gary Indiana, while reading  about Joan Jett Blakk’s revolutionary presidential campaign as it unfolded in real time.  

From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information

The magazine was an artwork in its own right, carefully crafted by publisher and editor  Robert R. Ford in his apartment. “We knew for ourselves what a rich and important  cultural thing gay Black men have and share,” Ford told writer Owen Keehnen. “We  wanted to make a magazine that would be a way of documenting our existence and  contribution to society. Our idea was not so much [to] radicalize or subvert the idea of  magazines as to make one from our own point of view.” 

Paging through the bound compendium of every issue of Thing is realizing the map you  hold in your hands is the very treasure you seek. Here are memories you didn’t even  know you had; layered with meaning and resonance through the inescapable passage  of time they become veritable reliquaries of soul.

Thing is published by Primary Information, $35.00 

From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information
From Thing, courtesy of Primary Information

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