Difference between revisions of "International Fantasy Award"
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− | The IFA was an international award, though it seemed to be primarily [[British]], for excellence within the [[sf]]/[[fantasy]] field and a precursor of the [[Hugo Award]]. It was created and promoted by [[John Wyndham]], [[Frank Cooper]], [[G. Ken Chapman]] and [[Leslie Flood]]. | + | The '''IFA''' was an international award, though it seemed to be primarily [[British]], for excellence within the [[sf]]/[[fantasy]] field and a precursor of the [[Hugo Award]]. It was created and promoted by [[John Wyndham]], [[Frank Cooper]], [[G. Ken Chapman]] and [[Leslie Flood]]. |
The first awards were made at 1951 [[Eastercon]], the [[Festivention]], held in [[London]] and named after the then-current Festival of Britain. Like most modern literary prizes, the IFA was awarded by a panel of selected experts in the field. | The first awards were made at 1951 [[Eastercon]], the [[Festivention]], held in [[London]] and named after the then-current Festival of Britain. Like most modern literary prizes, the IFA was awarded by a panel of selected experts in the field. | ||
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The IFA Website says: "It is said that the IFA was never designed to be a 'popular' award, in the sense that it was the judgement of the masses that counted, and while there is a lot to be said in favor of the 'informed expert committee' approach one wonders with hindsight whether that did not in fact lead to the award's demise, as there seems to have been little popular support or even interest in it from the general population of [[British fandom]] or the wider sf-reading community. The fact that the awards were presented at closed invitation-only events may well have alienated many [[science-fiction]] enthusiasts of the day." | The IFA Website says: "It is said that the IFA was never designed to be a 'popular' award, in the sense that it was the judgement of the masses that counted, and while there is a lot to be said in favor of the 'informed expert committee' approach one wonders with hindsight whether that did not in fact lead to the award's demise, as there seems to have been little popular support or even interest in it from the general population of [[British fandom]] or the wider sf-reading community. The fact that the awards were presented at closed invitation-only events may well have alienated many [[science-fiction]] enthusiasts of the day." | ||
− | Members of the judges panel included: [[J. M. Walsh]], [[John Carnell]], [[Walter Gillings]], [[Walter A. Willis]], Fred C. Brown, Georges Gallet, Theodore Maslowski , [[Anthony Boucher]], [[J. Francis Mccomas]], [[Everett | + | Members of the judges panel included: [[J. M. Walsh]], [[John Carnell]], [[Walter Gillings]], [[Walter A. Willis]], [[Fred C. Brown]], [[Georges Gallet]], [[Theodore Maslowski]], [[Anthony Boucher]], [[J. Francis Mccomas]], [[Everett F. Bleiler]], [[Groff Conklin]], [[Basil Davenport]], [[August Derleth]], [[Judith Merril]], [[Sigvard Ostlund]], [[John Beynon Harris]] , [[Wilson Tucker]], [[Willy Ley]]. Not all of them served every year, and they were recused in years when they had an eligible work. |
+ | |||
+ | [http://www.gostak.org.uk/ifa/ifaindex.htm Historical article. ] | ||
<tab head=top> | <tab head=top> | ||
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1955 ||''A Mirror for Observers'' by [[Edgar Pangborn]] ||not awarded | 1955 ||''A Mirror for Observers'' by [[Edgar Pangborn]] ||not awarded | ||
1956 ||colspan="2"| not awarded | 1956 ||colspan="2"| not awarded | ||
− | 1957 ||''Lord of the Rings'' by [[J. R. R. Tolkien]] ||not awarded | + | 1957 ||''[[Lord of the Rings]]'' by [[J. R. R. Tolkien]] ||not awarded |
</tab> | </tab> | ||
− | {{award | + | {{award | start=1951 | end=1957}} |
[[Category:UK]] | [[Category:UK]] |
Revision as of 17:40, 9 September 2022
The IFA was an international award, though it seemed to be primarily British, for excellence within the sf/fantasy field and a precursor of the Hugo Award. It was created and promoted by John Wyndham, Frank Cooper, G. Ken Chapman and Leslie Flood.
The first awards were made at 1951 Eastercon, the Festivention, held in London and named after the then-current Festival of Britain. Like most modern literary prizes, the IFA was awarded by a panel of selected experts in the field.
The award continued -- never wholly embedded into British fandom -- until 1957. The last winner was J. R. R. Tolkien, for Lord of the Rings. The award was presented at a special meeting of the SF Luncheon Club held during the period of the Loncon, the 1957 Worldcon in London. The presentation was not open to the general membership of the convention.
The IFA Website says: "It is said that the IFA was never designed to be a 'popular' award, in the sense that it was the judgement of the masses that counted, and while there is a lot to be said in favor of the 'informed expert committee' approach one wonders with hindsight whether that did not in fact lead to the award's demise, as there seems to have been little popular support or even interest in it from the general population of British fandom or the wider sf-reading community. The fact that the awards were presented at closed invitation-only events may well have alienated many science-fiction enthusiasts of the day."
Members of the judges panel included: J. M. Walsh, John Carnell, Walter Gillings, Walter A. Willis, Fred C. Brown, Georges Gallet, Theodore Maslowski, Anthony Boucher, J. Francis Mccomas, Everett F. Bleiler, Groff Conklin, Basil Davenport, August Derleth, Judith Merril, Sigvard Östlund, John Beynon Harris , Wilson Tucker, Willy Ley. Not all of them served every year, and they were recused in years when they had an eligible work.
Year | Fiction | Non-fiction |
---|---|---|
1951 | Earth Abides by George R. Stewart | The Conquest of Space by Willy Ley and Chesley Bonestell |
1952 | Fancies And Goodnights by John Collier | The Exploration of Space by Arthur C. Clarke |
1953 | City by Clifford D. Simak | Lands Beyond by L. Sprague de Camp and Willy Ley |
1954 | More Than Human by Theodore Sturgeon | not awarded |
1955 | A Mirror for Observers by Edgar Pangborn | not awarded |
1956 | not awarded | |
1957 | Lord of the Rings by J. R. R. Tolkien | not awarded |
Award | 1951—1957 |
This is an award page. If you know something about it, such as who awarded it, who the winners were, what the criteria were, and when it was awarded, please add it! See Standards for Awards. |