Difference between revisions of "SEFF"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
The Scandinavian-European Fan Fund, launched in 1983 by Ahrvid Engholm, Erik Andersson and David Langford, with the object of every second year sending a Scandinavian fan to som European convention outside of Scandinavia, every other some non-Scandinavian to a convention in Scandinavia, winners to be chosen by popular fan vote. The first SEFF trip was taken by Swedish fan David Nessle, who went to Seacon, the British Easter convention in 1984. In 1985, Scottish fan James Baker attended Swecon in Stockholm. In 1986, Swedish fan Maths Claesson went to Britain's Eastercon and in 1987, Swedish fan Anders Bellis attended Conspiracy, the Worldcon in Britain. This trip officially was the last, due to the gigantic feud resulting from the vote where Bellis won; funds left over from his trip were given in 1988 to Martin Tudor, who that year attended Swecon in Stockholm.
+
The Scandinavian-European Fan Fund, launched in 1983 by Ahrvid Engholm, Erik Andersson and David Langford, with the object of every second year sending a Scandinavian fan to some European convention outside of Scandinavia, every other some non-Scandinavian to a convention in Scandinavia, winners to be chosen by popular fan vote. The first SEFF trip was taken by Swedish fan David Nessle, who went to Seacon, the British Easter convention in 1984. In 1985, Scottish fan James Baker attended Swecon in Stockholm. In 1986, Swedish fan Maths Claesson went to Britain's Eastercon and in 1987, Swedish fan Anders Bellis attended Conspiracy, the Worldcon in Britain. This trip officially was the last, due to the gigantic feud resulting from the vote where Bellis won; funds left over from his trip were given in 1988 to Martin Tudor, who that year attended Swecon in Stockholm.
  
The origin of the feud following Bellis' SEFF win was the enmity bewteen Bellis and Ahrvid Engholm. In the race, Engholm supported Norwegian candidate Johan Schimanski, while most Swedish fans, including earlier fund winner Maths Claesson and John-Henri Holmberg, supported Bellis. When Bellis won, Engholm declared that this was due to vote falsification and cheating, and that consequently Bellis, Claesson and Holmberg were guilty of forgery, fraud, theft of the fund money, and in general criminal and unfannish behavior, and should be driven out of fandom. Engholm, nothing if not energetic, wrote voluminously about this, inundating virtually every Swedish fanzine published with his accusations, and the entire atmosphere in Swedish fandom became vitriolic. When Belllis wrote about this in his fan column in an issue of Nova science fiction in late 1987, Engholm resolutely got hold of the delivered bu not distributed print run of the magazine and absconded with it. In the end, the feud led to four lawsuits, all lost by Engholm, as well as to most Swedish fanzines either folding or sneaking off into MF-APA, an apa founded by Kaj Harju with the express purpose of circulating fanzines among all interested Swedish fan publishers except Ahrvid Engholm.
+
The origin of the feud following Bellis' SEFF win was the enmity bewteen Bellis and Ahrvid Engholm. In the race, Engholm supported Norwegian candidate Johan Schimanski, while most Swedish fans, including earlier fund winner Maths Claesson and John-Henri Holmberg, supported Bellis. When Bellis won, Engholm declared that this was due to vote falsification and cheating, and that consequently Bellis, Claesson and Holmberg were guilty of forgery, fraud, theft of the fund money, and in general criminal and unfannish behavior, and should be driven out of fandom. Engholm, nothing if not energetic, wrote voluminously about this, inundating virtually every Swedish fanzine published with his accusations, and the entire atmosphere in Swedish fandom became vitriolic. When Belllis wrote about this in his fan column in an issue of the professional magazine Nova science fiction in late 1987, Engholm resolutely got hold of the delivered but not distributed print run of the magazine and absconded with it. In the end, the feud led to four lawsuits, all lost by Engholm, as well as to most Swedish fanzines either folding or sneaking off into MF-APA, an apa founded by Kaj Harju with the express purpose of circulating fanzines among all interested Swedish fan publishers except Ahrvid Engholm.
  
Engholm to this day stands by his accusations.
+
By now, Engholm has repeated his accusations for thirty-five years.
  
 
{{fanfund | start=1980s | end=1980s}}
 
{{fanfund | start=1980s | end=1980s}}
 
[[Category:Europe]]
 
[[Category:Europe]]

Revision as of 11:54, 22 May 2023

The Scandinavian-European Fan Fund, launched in 1983 by Ahrvid Engholm, Erik Andersson and David Langford, with the object of every second year sending a Scandinavian fan to some European convention outside of Scandinavia, every other some non-Scandinavian to a convention in Scandinavia, winners to be chosen by popular fan vote. The first SEFF trip was taken by Swedish fan David Nessle, who went to Seacon, the British Easter convention in 1984. In 1985, Scottish fan James Baker attended Swecon in Stockholm. In 1986, Swedish fan Maths Claesson went to Britain's Eastercon and in 1987, Swedish fan Anders Bellis attended Conspiracy, the Worldcon in Britain. This trip officially was the last, due to the gigantic feud resulting from the vote where Bellis won; funds left over from his trip were given in 1988 to Martin Tudor, who that year attended Swecon in Stockholm.

The origin of the feud following Bellis' SEFF win was the enmity bewteen Bellis and Ahrvid Engholm. In the race, Engholm supported Norwegian candidate Johan Schimanski, while most Swedish fans, including earlier fund winner Maths Claesson and John-Henri Holmberg, supported Bellis. When Bellis won, Engholm declared that this was due to vote falsification and cheating, and that consequently Bellis, Claesson and Holmberg were guilty of forgery, fraud, theft of the fund money, and in general criminal and unfannish behavior, and should be driven out of fandom. Engholm, nothing if not energetic, wrote voluminously about this, inundating virtually every Swedish fanzine published with his accusations, and the entire atmosphere in Swedish fandom became vitriolic. When Belllis wrote about this in his fan column in an issue of the professional magazine Nova science fiction in late 1987, Engholm resolutely got hold of the delivered but not distributed print run of the magazine and absconded with it. In the end, the feud led to four lawsuits, all lost by Engholm, as well as to most Swedish fanzines either folding or sneaking off into MF-APA, an apa founded by Kaj Harju with the express purpose of circulating fanzines among all interested Swedish fan publishers except Ahrvid Engholm.

By now, Engholm has repeated his accusations for thirty-five years.


Fanfund 1980s1980s
This is a fan fund page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was created, who it benefited, why it was created, its result, its impact on fandom, and by adding links.