Back in September Jeri asked some very interesting questions about how fans could get involved with “organized” fandom. I have finally got around to answering that. Profuse apologies for the delay.
Fandom
Ian Gunn Memorial
Via Mike Glyer I discover that the Melbourne Science Fiction Club is hosting a “Tribute to Ian Gunn” on November 28th. I have no idea what this involves, but I certainly remember Gunny very fondly (he and K’rin often gave me a lift to club meetings). Hopefully someone will tell me more.
Cardiff Photos
OK, the Cardiff photos are now online. Having never watched Torchwood, I have no idea what’s recognizable and what isn’t, but I do know a rugby stadium when I see one. And I do have the promised TAFF photo.
[shashin type=”album” id=”17″ size=”medium”]
It’s Menacing Time!
It seems an awful long time since I have had the whole of the SMOF community furious with me, and as I don’t want to have to give up my “Menace to Fandom” title I thought I ought to do some proper menacing. Besides, as you may recall, my Denvention 3 report sort of tailed off because I had realized that I needed to write a whole new article on what value people get from Worldcon and how we can better market the event to them. Well, I have now written that article. I have no expectations that it will solve all of Worldcon’s problems (indeed, it won’t even get a lot of people to admit that there are problems), but hopefully it will spark a bit of debate and get people thinking about the issues. Check it out, and let me know what you think.
Gender Economics
Yes, economists really do study all sorts of things. Tyler Cowen points to a study of the effects of gender transition in the workplace:
We find that while transgender people have the same human capital after their transitions, their workplace experiences often change radically. We estimate that average earnings for female-to-male transgender workers increase slightly following their gender transitions, while average earnings for male-to-female transgender workers fall by nearly 1/3.
Sadly the paper that Cowen references isn’t available to non-academics except by subscribing to the journal in which it is printed, so some of the assumptions in the study are not at all clear. I would like to know, for example, whether the people studied were known to be transgendered at their workplace, as that can make a huge difference to how they are treated.
But basically this comes back to what I was talking about in the Gender Balance Question: “the idea that women should naturally aspire to be more like men, but that no man in his right mind would want to be like a woman.”
And if you really want to know how badly women are treated in the workspace, ask a transgender woman who has transitioned mid-career. Someone who has grown up female in a society where women are routinely discriminated against can become used to the effect and stop noticing it, but someone who suddenly discovers that their opinions and skills have dropped precipitously in worth simply because they have become female sees the issue very clearly indeed.
Mimeo Panel Photos Online
You can see Colin Hinz, Geri Sullivan, Frank Wu, Brianna SpaceKat and myself doing the mimeo demonstration at Denvention 3 in these photos. Check the final picture which is a close-up of Brianna’s artwork. For a first attempt at drawing on a stencil that was awesome (well, except for the spelling, but we all know that kids today can’t spell, right?).
Worldcon Report Online
I have finally managed to carve out enough time from the ongoing work panics to finish my Worldcon report. You can read it here. Now I need to get on with the Hugo results analysis, and an article about value generation and market segmentation for Worldcon.
Convention Anti-Harassment Policies
Kevin and I spent a fair amount of time yesterday discussing this new web site which calls on conventions to adopt specific anti-harassment policies. As Jed Hartman notes, one of the first things that comes to mind is, “But why would cons need an anti-harassment policy?” I guess if you are used to going to conventions full of old people it might be less obvious, but some of the goings on at Comic Con this year appear to have been quite horrible. Besides, there are good reasons for having such a policy.
Continue reading
Celebrity Worship
Via Mike Glyer I found this report on Denvention3. It is always good to hear that people enjoyed Worldcon, but one particular comment stopped me in my tracks:
I go to a panel discussion to hear the panel members’ opinions – not the audience’s. The audience contributes questions, not their own opinions, which is a concept that many attendees did not seem to grasp. (Exceptions, of course, for notable authors or professionals who happen to be in the audience.)
Having moderated very many panels in my time, I’d be the first to admit that there are audience members who need to be restrained from expressing their opinion interminably. However, that’s a small price to pay for a community that values discussion. Being a famous author does not automatically give you a monopoly on knowledge or wisdom. And if Worldcon ever becomes a convention where the point of attending is to worship at the feet of celebrities I for one will stop attending.
Another One Done
Well, that’s Worldcon over for another year. The mimeo demo appeared to go very well. It didn’t draw a huge audience, but there were several people there who had not used mimeo duplicators before and they all seemed very interested. The most significant point that came out of the demo is that mimeo really is a technology. You can’t buy the machines any more, but even if you could you can’t buy stencils, the right sort of paper, the ink or even corflu. In ten years time doing such a demonstration may be impossible because the supplies being saved by fans of mimeo will have run out.
Hopefully I was fairly entertaining during the demo, but once the program slot had ended and we were just into running pages I’m afraid I opted out. I went back to my hotel room and slept for a couple of hours. I still have a headache. Right now I need food. After that I will decide whether I can make it to parties, or whether I should do something with the huge amount of audio and video footage that I have collected during the past week.
Another One Goes Live
I’ve been doing a lot of web site work of late. The most recent one to go live is an upgrade to the SFSFC web site. It is now WordPress-based, which will make it much easier for Kevin and subsequent Secretaries to update it. Also if you want to keep up with the doings of this “great fannish powerhouse”, there’s a handy RSS feed that you can subscribe to.
Down With Hierarchy
A round of applause to Jeremiah Tolbert for this plea to people to stop picking on each other. He’s talking about SF fans being nice to furries and fan fic writers, but he might just as well be talking about hierarchies in any group. I may start talking about the TBLG community just to make a point. And I’m sure there are just the same sort of distinctions amongst rail fans, stamp collectors, petrol heads and just about any other group you care to mention. The academic hierarchy would, I think, be a wonder to behold.
ToiletGate Update
First of all, many thanks to all of you who have joined the Facebook Group, and who have signed the online petition. Your support is much appreciated.
For now most of the lobbying is in the hands of experts such as Christine Burns who have direct access to Those In Authority. However, I am working on an essay about the whole toilet panic nonsense. If it is taking a little while, that’s partly because I’m on the road and partly because elements of it cross over quite strongly with what I was planning to say about the gender imbalance issue. Bear with me, please.
I do, however, want to raise one issue arising from this, because it is an event management issue and therefore has direct bearing on science fiction conventions.
This morning Roz pointed her readers to this post which talks about the fact that large events such as Pride are pretty much obliged to hire private security firms, because in this regulation-obsessed country you can’t do security for a major event unless you have the appropriate qualifications. Willing volunteers from within the community are unlikely to have the necessary licenses, and so can’t be used.
We see this sort of thing already in some respects in Worldcon. Tech crews sometimes have to rely in people who are professionals in the industry because union rules at the convention center only allow union members to operate the equipment. And Worldcons are also often obliged to use professional security staff supplied by the convention center (at ruinous rates). We have also learned, from bad experiences within our own community, that people who want to do “Security” are often the last people who ought to be allowed to do it, because they are more interested in pretty black uniforms and bossing people about than in the success of the event.
The problem with this sort of thing is that the security people you hire may know nothing about the event that they are supposed to be guarding. This can lead to the sort of inappropriate behavior that Roz suffered on Saturday. And with really big events (and Pride is really big) your chosen security firm may subcontract because they don’t have enough staff to fulfill the contract. This makes it very difficult to ensure that the people you hire get appropriate sensitivity training.
And this problem will get worse, particularly in the UK where the government adds new regulatory burdens on a daily basis. The next big problem is likely to be child safety. There are moves afoot that may mean that everyone working on an event has to be vetted to ensure that they are safe around children. That’s going to open a whole can of worms about socially conformant behavior, with the defenders of the Patriarchy doubtless wanting to ban anyone who is gender variant, anyone who is sexually variant, anyone who has ever had a drug conviction and so on. It will be a mess, and it will be just one more nail in the coffin on volunteer activity.
Entering Wonderlands
Not through a rabbit hole, though it feels a bit like that right now. Wonderlands is a new Ning-based social networking site for the fantasy fiction community. I found out about it from Mark Newton, and it appears to be UK-based as it only has 19 members and I can see John Jarrold, Debbie Miller, Neil Williamson and Darren Turpin amongst the usual suspects. So I have gone and signed up and now I’m waiting to be approved. I’ll let you know if that happens.
In the meantime I’m none too impressed with the software. Maybe it is just a theme that someone did for it, but the sign-up screens are pretty much impossible to read. Also when I clicked on “My Page” I got a message box that managed to tell me that my account was both pending and approved.
Anyway, I am now apparently approved, so I’m off to chat to people there. Feel free to come and join us.
Update: Now 50 members, and a whole lot of US people joined as well. Word is getting around.
Update 2: Debbie Miller appears to be the person who started this. Who knows what it might turn into, but thus far I have discovered a new fantasy convention due to take place in Chester next June. It is called Aetherica, and the GoHs will be Peter Beagle and Joe Abercrombie. Aside from John Wilson, the committee are people I don’t know, and that is good news because it means new con-running blood. Sadly I have to be in San Francisco for this, but I hope the con goes well and that they manage to make it a regular event.
Farewell Frank
As you probably know by now, I’m not good at obituaries. I generally don’t know what to say, and I also think there’s a major cultural disconnect between the UK and US in this area, so I often end up saying nothing rather than sound stupid or offensive. But I’m going to make an exception for Frank Darcy.
I’m not sure that I ever met Frank, though we may well have been at a convention together at some time. I did, however, know him through the Internet. Quite a few people I know have been struggling with cancer of late. Some, thankfully, have beaten the disease. Frank lost his battle this morning. But along the way he showed amazing bravery and good heart, in particular by starting the Toast to Life project. And as I consequence Frank became one of those people that I would very much have liked to meet. Now I won’t get the chance. Sometimes life gets you like that. But hopefully Frank’s good example will have inspired other people. And when it is my turn to go I hope to do so with the same amount of good cheer and concern for others.
Westercon #61 Business Meeting
Because LiveJournal is a steaming heap of foetid dingo’s kidneys less flexible than WordPress, Kevin has asked me to post the agenda for the Westercon #61 Business Meeting here.
Happy reading, SMOFy persons.
Update: Dates fixed in document. The old copy from last year bug strikes again.
Update 2: More changes. Don’t ask me, I just post the things.
Update 3: Yep, another new version (or rather version 2 back again). You do not want to know how the sausage is made.
More on Fanzine History
Via Pharyngula I discover this article by Gary Farber (hi Gary, long time to see) about jazz and HP Lovecraft. Gary talks about Willis Conover who was a leading jazz DJ before DJs were invented, and also a pal of weird Howard. This is what caught my eye:
Aside from Conover’s early fanzine activity in the thirties, he was one of the most prolific correspondents with that most prolific of correspondents, H. P. Lovecraft.
And like a lot of us old-time sf fans, Conover started in fanzines:
[…] WILLIS CONOVER (1921–1996), best known as the jazz commentator for Voice of America, published Science Fantasy Correspondent when he was fifteen.
That would have been 1936.
What I Did on My Weekend
Well, lot of things actually, most of them to do with paid work, which I’m not at liberty to discuss. I did, however, spend a few hours getting a web site up and running. Kevin and some other folks at SFSFC have drawn the short straw and have bravely offered to bid to run a Westercon in 2011 – a year in which there is expected to be a west coast Worldcon sucking up much of the available talent. So, in my role as technical consultant to the SFSFC Board, I helped them put together a bid web site. I see that Kevin has credited me with doing the “heavy lifting”, but this sort of thing isn’t really that hard once you know what you are doing. Still, it was useful to be able to use Skype and LogMeIn to work together. It was almost like being in the same room, but without the cuddles…
I note from elsewhere that people are paying between €550 to €1500 to have WordPress sites built for them. That’s not bad money for a few hours work. However, I suspect that what they are actually paying for is the sort of thing that Tony does. People are always prepared to pay more for something that looks spectacular. The sort of thing that I do with WordPress is mainly behind the scenes code. Even when that’s quite complex – for SF Awards Watch, for example – it isn’t immediately visible so it doesn’t seem impressive. Still, that’s the way the world is – there’s no point moaning about it.
The History of Zines
GalleyCat has an essay on the history of “zines”. It is, I suspect, guaranteed to cause apoplexy amongst members of Core Fandom. It is good to see the vast range of interests for which fanzines have been created acknowledged, but there do appear to be some distinct holes in Tim Brown’s knowledge.
Oh dear, Zemanta thinks that “Core Fandom” is a reference to porn…
Update: I lobbed a pass into the end zone and Mike Glyer caught it for a touchdown. That’s a good article on fanzine history that he links to.
We Can Haz Weddingz
What do we get up to at BASFA Meetings? Well, yesterday we had a wedding. Profuse congratulations to the happy couple. Wish I could have been there.