Difference between revisions of "Lee Hoffman Hoax"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Lee Hoffman Hoax
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
{{fancy2|text=
 
{{fancy2|text=
was not really meant as a hoax. When [[Leeh]] entered [[fandom]] she didn't bother to state her sex, which many assumed on the strength of the first name and the well-known predominance of he-fans to be male. Not till she appeared at [[Nolacon]] was the truth generally realized.  
+
was not really meant as a [[hoax]]. When [[Leeh]] entered [[fandom]] she didn't bother to state her [[sex]], which many assumed on the strength of the first name and the well-known predominance of he-fans to be male. Not till she appeared at [[Nolacon]] was the truth generally realized.  
 
}}
 
}}
  
{{misc}}
+
If not actually a hoax, it was a deliberate obfuscation.
  
 +
Hoffman, whose [[nickname]], Lee, was short for Shirley, went to some trouble to keep her gender a secret, reportedly going so far as to tell people that the then-current Korean War draft had not been a problem “because I couldn't pass the physical,” leading people to think she was crippled or ill.
 +
 +
She [http://www.fanac.org/fanzines/Fanhistorica/Fanhistorica01-10.html recollected] in ''[[Fanhistorica]]'' 1 (May 1976, p. 10):
 +
Lee is an ambiguous name. Non-committal. Throughout my first year of [[fan]] [[pub|publishing]], I made a point of never making a point of being female. This was, indeed, on purpose. It wasn’t too difficult. I was in an isolated section of the country, in face-to-face contact with only a couple of other [[fans]]. I swore a few close associates, like [[Shelby Vick]], to secrecy. I let the rest of ''[[Quandry|Q]]’s'' readers draw their own conclusions. In typical male chauvinistic manner, most concluded that the [[editor]] of a successful [[fanzine]] must be male.
 +
 +
 +
{{Fanhistory}}
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
 
[[Category:hoax]]
 
[[Category:hoax]]

Revision as of 23:54, 28 November 2020

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
was not really meant as a hoax. When Leeh entered fandom she didn't bother to state her sex, which many assumed on the strength of the first name and the well-known predominance of he-fans to be male. Not till she appeared at Nolacon was the truth generally realized.

If not actually a hoax, it was a deliberate obfuscation.

Hoffman, whose nickname, Lee, was short for Shirley, went to some trouble to keep her gender a secret, reportedly going so far as to tell people that the then-current Korean War draft had not been a problem “because I couldn't pass the physical,” leading people to think she was crippled or ill.

She recollected in Fanhistorica 1 (May 1976, p. 10):

Lee is an ambiguous name. Non-committal. Throughout my first year of fan publishing, I made a point of never making a point of being female. This was, indeed, on purpose. It wasn’t too difficult. I was in an isolated section of the country, in face-to-face contact with only a couple of other fans. I swore a few close associates, like Shelby Vick, to secrecy. I let the rest of Q’s readers draw their own conclusions. In typical male chauvinistic manner, most concluded that the editor of a successful fanzine must be male. 



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