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action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home/drcprod/public_html/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6114Despite the growing popularity of makerspaces in higher education, creating and sustaining a permanent makerspace takes more time, money, and labor than many academic departments are able to commit. Yet educators are finding ways to bring making practices into classrooms, libraries, and other spaces on campus, demonstrating that one need not have massive amounts of funding or high-tech equipment to enable students across disciplines to experiment with hands-on, project-based learning. Getting the chance to explore practices associated with craft and design in a formalized learning environment, especially in the humanities where reading and writing are the dominant modes of engagement, can frequently empower students who may not be strong writers or who feel alienated from overly romanticized notions of \u201ccreativity.\u201d Drawing on my experience leading over twenty zine workshops between 2012 and 2015, I describe some of the ways I incorporate zine-making into my pedagogical practice, arguing that compositional craft activities such as bookbinding and collage can bring multiple kinds of knowledge into interdisciplinary classrooms and give students permission to practice writing in a wide range of hybrid genres. Zine workshops serve as pop-up makerspaces where the connections between writing and crafting can be elaborated through practices of cultural production: the active process of creating culture through the making of, for example, media and art.<\/p>\n