Difference between revisions of "A History of Fandom in 100 Documents"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 12: Line 12:
 
[[1937]]|| First [[mailing]] of [[FAPA]], August ||[[Don Wollheim ]] and [[John Michel]]|| The first [[fan]] [[apa]].  
 
[[1937]]|| First [[mailing]] of [[FAPA]], August ||[[Don Wollheim ]] and [[John Michel]]|| The first [[fan]] [[apa]].  
 
[[1938]] || ''[[S. F. Checklist]]'' 1, October  || [[R. D. Swisher|R. D.]] and [[F. N. Swisher]]|| Launch of a project of making a listing of all the [[fanzines]] that ever appeared anywhere, now being continued on this site.  
 
[[1938]] || ''[[S. F. Checklist]]'' 1, October  || [[R. D. Swisher|R. D.]] and [[F. N. Swisher]]|| Launch of a project of making a listing of all the [[fanzines]] that ever appeared anywhere, now being continued on this site.  
[[1939]] ||[[A Warning!]] || [[Dave Kyle]] || The [[yellow]] [[pamflet]] of [[Michelist]] agitprop that Kyle [[pubbed]] for the [[First Worldcon]], triggering the first [[Exclusion Act]].
+
[[1939]] ||''[[A Warning!]]'' || [[Dave Kyle]] || The [[yellow]] [[pamflet]] of [[Michelist]] agitprop that Kyle [[pubbed]] for the [[First Worldcon]], triggering the first [[Exclusion Act]].
 
[[1948]] || ''[[Ah! Sweet Idiocy!]]'' || [[Francis Towner Laney]]|| FTL’s [[gafiation]] [[fanoir]].  
 
[[1948]] || ''[[Ah! Sweet Idiocy!]]'' || [[Francis Towner Laney]]|| FTL’s [[gafiation]] [[fanoir]].  
 
[[1954]] ||''[[The Enchanted Duplicator|The Enchanted Duplicator]]'' || [[Walt Willis]] and [[Bob Shaw]] ||Possibly the most reprinted work in [[fandom]], ''[[The Enchanted Duplicator]]'' is an allegory which crystallized a particular image of what [[fandom]] ought to be and gave shape to [[fandom]]'s future.  
 
[[1954]] ||''[[The Enchanted Duplicator|The Enchanted Duplicator]]'' || [[Walt Willis]] and [[Bob Shaw]] ||Possibly the most reprinted work in [[fandom]], ''[[The Enchanted Duplicator]]'' is an allegory which crystallized a particular image of what [[fandom]] ought to be and gave shape to [[fandom]]'s future.  
[[1955]] || ''[[The Neo-Fan's Guide]]'' || [[Bob Tucker]] || Tucker’s essential introduction to [[fandom]].  
+
rowspan="2"|[[1955]] || ''[[The Neo-Fan's Guide]]'' || [[Bob Tucker]] || Tucker’s essential introduction to [[fandom]].
 +
“[[The March of Slime]]”||[[MaD Productions]]||The introduction of [[blog]].  
 
[[1960]]|| ''[[SaFari Annual]] 1: Who Killed Science Fiction?''|| [[Earl Kemp|Earl]] and [[Nancy Kemp]]|| Results of a [[poll]] on the subject by 71 [[BNFs]] and [[pro]]s.  
 
[[1960]]|| ''[[SaFari Annual]] 1: Who Killed Science Fiction?''|| [[Earl Kemp|Earl]] and [[Nancy Kemp]]|| Results of a [[poll]] on the subject by 71 [[BNFs]] and [[pro]]s.  
 
[[1961]]|| ''[[SaFari Annual]] 2: Why Is a Fan?''|| [[Earl Kemp|Earl]] and [[Nancy Kemp]]|| Dozens of fans' opinions on what brought people into [[fandom]].
 
[[1961]]|| ''[[SaFari Annual]] 2: Why Is a Fan?''|| [[Earl Kemp|Earl]] and [[Nancy Kemp]]|| Dozens of fans' opinions on what brought people into [[fandom]].

Revision as of 00:59, 18 October 2022

What hundred documents tell the story of fandom? We're not talking history books here, but documents and articles which themselves formed our culture from the earliest days until today.

The list is just starting.

Year Document Author/Editor Notes
1926 Amazing Stories, April Hugo Gernsback Inaugural issue of the first science-fiction magazine.
1927 First Fan Letter with Address, Amazing Stories, August John Mackay The first letter written to a prozine letter column published with a fan's address, a necessary baby step towards fandom.
1930 First ish of The Planet, July Allen Glasser The clubzine of The Scienceers, considered the First Fanzine.
1934 Announcement of the formation of the Science Fiction League, Wonder Stories, May Hugo Gernsback The SFL, probably the single most important fan organization of the 1930s, advanced the first protofans’ collective self awareness.
Announcement of the Society for the Prevention of Wire Staples in Science Fiction Magazines, Astounding Stories, November Bob Tucker Launch of the Great Staple War.
1937 First mailing of FAPA, August Don Wollheim and John Michel The first fan apa.
1938 S. F. Checklist 1, October R. D. and F. N. Swisher Launch of a project of making a listing of all the fanzines that ever appeared anywhere, now being continued on this site.
1939 A Warning! Dave Kyle The yellow pamflet of Michelist agitprop that Kyle pubbed for the First Worldcon, triggering the first Exclusion Act.
1948 Ah! Sweet Idiocy! Francis Towner Laney FTL’s gafiation fanoir.
1954 The Enchanted Duplicator Walt Willis and Bob Shaw Possibly the most reprinted work in fandom, The Enchanted Duplicator is an allegory which crystallized a particular image of what fandom ought to be and gave shape to fandom's future.
1955 The Neo-Fan's Guide Bob Tucker Tucker’s essential introduction to fandom.
The March of Slime MaD Productions The introduction of blog.
1960 SaFari Annual 1: Who Killed Science Fiction? Earl and Nancy Kemp Results of a poll on the subject by 71 BNFs and pros.
1961 SaFari Annual 2: Why Is a Fan? Earl and Nancy Kemp Dozens of fans' opinions on what brought people into fandom.
1963 The Great Breen Boondoggle, or All Berkeley Is Plunged into War Bill Donaho The first public sally in the Breendoggle.
1965 Discon 1 Guide George Scithers A long document describing how Scithers ran Discon I, the 1963 Worldcon. It is noteworthy because it describes in interesting detail how a Worldcon was run back when they were still small.



Fanhistory
This is a fanhistory page. Please add more detail.