Toby Mott’s new book collects zines, films, and photography to document the anti-racist, socialist, and queer lineages often erased from the subculture’s public image.
The stereotype of the 1980s British skinhead — shaved head, braces, fascist salutes — remains one of punk’s most reductive exports. Toby Mott’s forthcoming book Skinhead: An Archive, set for release via Ditto Press, pushes back against that flattened image with a curated sweep of material from the era’s zines, films, posters, and photography.
Mott, a historian of punk ephemera, draws on writings by Bruce la Bruce and Garry Bushell, among others, to assemble a portrait of a subculture that was never monolithic. The archive spans the 1980s and 1990s, documenting the often-obscured presence of anti-racist, socialist, and queer skinhead formations that existed alongside — and in direct opposition to — the far-right factions that dominate media memory.
The project arrives at a moment when public conversations around subcultural identity continue to wrestle with oversimplification. By foregrounding primary documents, Mott lets the multiplicity speak for itself. The book does not argue for a sanitized version of skinhead culture; it simply restores what has been selectively forgotten.
For those tracking the documentation of underground movements, Skinhead: An Archive functions as a corrective. It refuses to let a complex lineage be defined by its most violent faction.
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