Difference between revisions of "AutoClave"
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Moreover, in those days when cons were spread fairly far apart, the [[Detroit]] [[fen]] felt that they should distinguish their effort from that of nearby [[Ann Arbor]]’s [[ConFusion]]. | Moreover, in those days when cons were spread fairly far apart, the [[Detroit]] [[fen]] felt that they should distinguish their effort from that of nearby [[Ann Arbor]]’s [[ConFusion]]. | ||
− | No one thought of passing the [[convention]] to other groups across the country, which meant that when the [[Detroit]]-area [[fanzine fans]] who put on AutoClave, tired, AutoClave ceased. The rotating fanzine cons [[Corflu]], and then [[ | + | No one thought of passing the [[convention]] to other groups across the country, which meant that when the [[Detroit]]-area [[fanzine fans]] who put on AutoClave, tired, AutoClave ceased. The rotating fanzine cons [[Corflu]], and then [[ditto]], came later. |
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Latest revision as of 19:07, 1 November 2023
AutoClave, the series of conventions in the Detroit area, 1976 to 1978 and 1980 and 1981, was the first con aimed at fanzine fans (as distinguished from the very earliest conventions at which virtually all attendees were involved in fanzines to one or another extent).
The concom and volunteers were mainly members of the Wayne Third Foundation, the Wayne State University SF club.
Amid the explosion of cons in the 1970s, many fanzine fans tended to be shy and to keep to their print-oriented focus. Organizers felt that a con devoted to their interests might lure some of the hermit-like faneds and fanzine contributors to meet. Also, fandom at large was increasingly uninterested in written fanhistory or the arcane minutiae of repro and other details of pubbing one's ish that fanzine fans wanted to talk about at cons.
Moreover, in those days when cons were spread fairly far apart, the Detroit fen felt that they should distinguish their effort from that of nearby Ann Arbor’s ConFusion.
No one thought of passing the convention to other groups across the country, which meant that when the Detroit-area fanzine fans who put on AutoClave, tired, AutoClave ceased. The rotating fanzine cons Corflu, and then ditto, came later.
Convention | Dates | GoH | Toastmaster | Chair |
---|---|---|---|---|
AutoClave 1 | May 28-31, 1976 | Gene Wolfe, Donn Brazier | Mike Glicksohn | Gary Mattingly, Joe Wesson, Leah A. Zeldes |
AutoClave 2 | July 22-24, 1977 | Donald C. Thompson, Don D'Ammassa | Jon Singer | Leah A. Zeldes |
AutoClave 3 | July 21-23, 1978 | Terry Hughes, Derek Carter | Ben Zuhl | Leah A. Zeldes |
AutoClave 4 | Jeanne Gomoll, Dan Steffan | Ted White | ||
AutoClave V | July 24-26, 1981 | Howard DeVore | Brian Earl Brown |
Metro Detroit Science Fiction Society, Inc.[edit]
Sponsor of AutoClave was the Metro Detroit Science Fiction Society, Inc., a non-profit organization created to hold AutoClave. Incorporated March 5, 1976, and dissolved October 10, 1981. Gary Mattingly was President, and Leah A. Zeldes was Secretary, and later president. The Society's sole purpose was running AutoClave.
Convention | |
1976—1981 |
This is a convention page. Please extend it by adding information about the convention, including dates, GoHs, convention chairman, locale, sponsoring organization, external links to convention pages, awards given, the program, notable events, anecdotes, pictures, scans of publications, pictures of T-shirts, con reports, etc. |