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Sarah Mirk
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Sarah Mirk

Sarah Shay Mirk (she/they) is an author, zinester,[1] and journalist based in Portland, Oregon, in the United States.

Key Information

Education

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Mirk attended Grinnell College, graduating in 2008.[2]

Career

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Cover of "Why Wikipedia Matters", Mirk's zine about Wikipedia, 2022

She worked for the Portland Mercury from 2008 to 2013.[3] She has also written for Bitch Media.[4] Since 2017 Mirk has been a contributing editor at The Nib.

In 2019, they also undertook the enterprise of making one zine a day,[5][6] and she then compiled a hundred of them in a self-published book, Year of Zines (2020).[7] They make their zines freely available to "anyone, especially teachers and educators".[8]

Guantanamo Voices was a New York Times pick for the Best Graphic Novels of 2020.[9] Mirk also teaches a writing class for graduate students at Portland State University's Art + Design program.

Their comics have been featured in The Nib, The New Yorker, Bitch, and NPR.

In 2024, Sarah Mirk faced online criticism after publishing a satirical, "sanitized" version of the handkerchief code.[10]

Works

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Articles

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  • Mirk, Sarah (March 26, 2014). "Open Source Feminism: An Intervention with Wikipedia". NTEN: The Nonprofit Technology Enterprise Network.

Books

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  • Oregon History Comics (Know Your City, 2012. Small comic books about Oregon history. Available for free for non-commercial purposes on Mirk's official website.)[11]
  • Sex from Scratch: Making Your Own Relationship Rules (Microcosm, 2014)[4]
  • Open Earth (Limerence Press, 2018. A queer sci-fi comic about polyamory, with art by Eva Cabrera and Claudia Aguirre)[12]
  • Guantanamo Voices: True Accounts from the World’s Most Infamous Prison (Abrams, 2020. Anthology of nonfiction comics)[13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]
  • Year of Zines (self-published, 2020)[14]

Interviews

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  • Nieman Reports - How comics can enhance reader engagement, bring new audiences to narrative nonfiction.[22]

References

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