In recent years there has been a resurgence of interest in the architecture of the 1960s and 1970s, yet the role of the many experimental publications that fuelled that intensely creative period has been largely neglected. Coined in the early twentieth century to designate progressive literary journals, the term little magazine was reclaimed during the 1960s to describe the proliferation of independent architecture periodicals that appeared in response to the political, social and artistic changes of the period. During that fertile period, the AA too acted as an incubator for a number of ephemeral, feisty titles - including White Rabbit and ARse - that testify to Londons key role in the culture of little magazines. The terms little and magazine are not to be taken at face value: in addition to short-lived, self-published material, the exhibition Clip, Stamp, Fold includes pamphlets and building instruction manuals, as well as professional journals that experienced moments of littleness. Moderated by Beatriz Colomina and Shumon Basar, the first session takes the form of a discussion of the period and its products by several of the original protagonists: Peter Cook, David Greene, Dennis Crompton, Peter Murray, Dennis Sharp, and Mary Wall.