Difference between revisions of "Femmefans"

From Fancyclopedia 3
Jump to navigation Jump to search
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
'''Femmefans''' are the opposite of [[fanboy]]s, both in gender and demeanor.  
 
'''Femmefans''' are the opposite of [[fanboy]]s, both in gender and demeanor.  
  
The term '''''femmefans''''' or '''''femmefen''''' for female [[fans]] dates back to the days when there weren't very many, and has been largely replaced by more PC, less euphonious phrases like "'''women in [[fandom]]'''," but old-time fans still use it when a distinction between genders matters.
+
The term '''''femmefans''''' or '''''femmefen''''' for female [[fans]] dates back to the days when there weren't too many, but old-time fans still use it when a distinction between genders matters.
  
Men so outnumbered women in early [[fandom]] that when [[Lee Hoffman]] began to [[correspondence|correspond]] with other [[fans]], everyone thought she was male.  [[Bob Tucker]] wrote that, in 1951, when she and two other fans trooped into his [[Nolacon 1]] hotel room and introduced themselves, he had just stepped out of the shower and was so flabbergasted that he dropped his towel.  
+
Men outnumbered women in early [[fandom]] enough that when [[Lee Hoffman]] began to [[correspondence|correspond]] with other [[fans]], everyone [[Lee Hoffman Hoax|thought she was male]].  [[Bob Tucker]] wrote that, in 1951, when she and two other fans trooped into his [[Nolacon 1]] hotel room and introduced themselves, he had just stepped out of the bath and was so flabbergasted that he dropped his towel.  
  
More women joined fandom in their own right rather than as a companion to a boyfriend or husband beginning in the late 1960s and early '70s, when the [[microcosm]] expanded exponentially in the wake of ''[[Star Trek]]''. However, despite being in the minority, women nevertheless made an impact on fandom before then, among them [[Morojo]], [[Margaret Ford Keifer]] and [[Janie Lamb]], who were members of [[First Fandom]], and [[Anna Sinclare Moffatt]], [[Julian May]] and [[Dirce Archer]], who [[chaired]] [[Worldcons]].
+
In the early years, it was a rare girl who entered fandom other than “via the 3 routine routes of masculinity; i.e., brother, boyfriend or breadwinner,” as [[Forry Ackerman]] put it in 1942. As late as the 1950s, [[Harry Warner]] [https://efanzines.com/AOY/AOY-14.htm asserted], “Lee Hoffman is the first all-out girl fan who isn’t hanging onto the coattails of a brother, husband, or boyfriend....” (This was not actually true, as accounts of [[Jean Bogert]], [[Barbara Bovard]], [[Mary Byers]], [[Tigrina]], and others attest.)
  
 +
More women joined fandom on their own rather than as a companion to a boyfriend or relative beginning in the late 1960s and early '70s, when the [[microcosm]] [[Increase in Convention Sizes in the 1970s|expanded exponentially]]. However, despite being in the minority, women nevertheless made an impact on fandom before then, among them [[Morojo]], [[Judith Merril]], [[Helen Cloukey]] and [[Virginia Kidd]], who were among the [[First Fandom|First Fans]], and [[Julian May]], [[Noreen Falasca]], [[Anna Sinclare Moffatt]], [[Dirce Archer]] and [[Ella Parker]], who [[chaired]] [[Worldcons]].
 +
 +
Also see [[Fanne]], [[Early Femmefen]].
  
 
{{fancy2|text=
 
{{fancy2|text=
 
Explaining ''everything'' is contrary to our [[philosophy]] of education.  
 
Explaining ''everything'' is contrary to our [[philosophy]] of education.  
 
}}
 
}}
 +
  
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
 
[[Category:fancy2]]
 
{{fanspeak}}
 
{{fanspeak}}

Latest revision as of 15:16, 1 April 2024

Femmefans are the opposite of fanboys, both in gender and demeanor.

The term femmefans or femmefen for female fans dates back to the days when there weren't too many, but old-time fans still use it when a distinction between genders matters.

Men outnumbered women in early fandom enough that when Lee Hoffman began to correspond with other fans, everyone thought she was male. Bob Tucker wrote that, in 1951, when she and two other fans trooped into his Nolacon 1 hotel room and introduced themselves, he had just stepped out of the bath and was so flabbergasted that he dropped his towel.

In the early years, it was a rare girl who entered fandom other than “via the 3 routine routes of masculinity; i.e., brother, boyfriend or breadwinner,” as Forry Ackerman put it in 1942. As late as the 1950s, Harry Warner asserted, “Lee Hoffman is the first all-out girl fan who isn’t hanging onto the coattails of a brother, husband, or boyfriend....” (This was not actually true, as accounts of Jean Bogert, Barbara Bovard, Mary Byers, Tigrina, and others attest.)

More women joined fandom on their own rather than as a companion to a boyfriend or relative beginning in the late 1960s and early '70s, when the microcosm expanded exponentially. However, despite being in the minority, women nevertheless made an impact on fandom before then, among them Morojo, Judith Merril, Helen Cloukey and Virginia Kidd, who were among the First Fans, and Julian May, Noreen Falasca, Anna Sinclare Moffatt, Dirce Archer and Ella Parker, who chaired Worldcons.

Also see Fanne, Early Femmefen.

From Fancyclopedia 2, ca. 1959
Explaining everything is contrary to our philosophy of education.

Fanspeak
This is a fanspeak page. Please extend it by adding information about when and by whom it was coined, whether it’s still in use, etc.