Beyond Fandom
Beyond Fandom: Fans, Culture & Politics in the 20th Century edited by Rob Hansen, published in November 2023 (and updated since) by Ansible Editions, is another TAFF free ebook on fanhistory. It has almost 73 thousand words[1] and was followed by a PoD trade paperback. It won the 2024 FAAn Award for Best Special Publication.
Stirred to action by a particularly stupid and dismissive media generalization about science fiction fans, Rob Hansen has prepared this collection of brief biographies and essays that tell – both in his words and in their own – the stories of fans who have made some impact on the mundane world. Not so much traditional SF-inspired careers in writing, editing, publishing or Big Science, as the less predictable options indicated in the contents list.
The end of the Glossary mentions "Many of the people featured herein have entries in the Science Fiction Encyclopedia and/or Fancyclopedia 3". Of course, the book presents deeper research than available here (by the time of publication); on the other hand it contains no simple overview who the people featured are, so one is provided below, after the chapter titles. Note that the book does not fully adhere to the format "one chapter – single subject", therefore in the plural chapters some discretion must be applied and not every name mentioned or even quoted is listed.
Contents[edit]
Foreword
Glossary
- The Anti-Fascist (Clifton Amsbury; also mentioned is the UK’s Bob Richardson)
- The Pacifists (Mike Rosenblum and Charles D. Hornig, mentioning others inc. Ron Holmes)
- The Warriors (letters by Joe Gibson, Earl Kay†, Ted Carnell, Georges Gallet and Herbert Häussler; with a longer list of fans fallen in the War)
- The Lesbian Pioneer (Tigrina)
- The Voice of America (Willis Conover)
- The Futurists (some rarer visitors at the White Horse, inc. Doris Lessing)
- The Painters (John Grossman and Mike Hinge)
- The Record Company (as briefly founded by James Blish and Doc Lowndes; also music articles by Francis T. Laney)
- The Folkzines (Lee Hoffman et al.) – reprint of long reports by Mike Moorcock, who also contributed comments throughout the book
- The Aldermaston Marcher (John Brunner)
- The Political Prisoner (Chan Davis)
- The Beat Generation (various, longest reprint by Dave Rike)
- The Film Critic (Roger Ebert)
- The Film Director Swami (Mike Wilson)
- The King of Greenwich Village (Dave Van Ronk and the Riverside Dive)
- The Friend the Beatles Wrote For (Bill Harry)
- The Nazi Occupation Movie – chapter by Jim Linwood on It Happened Here by Pat Kearney and Kevin Brownlow
- The Playwright (Jeff Wanshel)
- The Kings of Pornography (Earl Kemp et al.)
- The CIA Pilot (Art Wilson)
- The Counterculture (Paul Williams et al.)
- The Musicians (Graham Charnock and others)
- The Music Mogul (Greg Shaw)
- The Punk Promoter (Jonh Ingham)
- The Senior Civil Servants (long letters by Walter A. Willis; in the endnotes Leroy Kettle is mentioned)
- The Anti-Nuclear Activists (Joseph Nicholas, Judith Hanna and others)
- The Government Minister (Race Mathews)
- The Trans Icon (Roz Kaveney)
- The Political Scientist (Rainer Eisfeld) – added after the early version was released, closes with his email of 25 November 2023
- The Pope’s Astronomer (Guy Consolmagno)
- The Professor of Law (Lilian Edwards)
Afterword
Appendix: As Others See Us (selected from the same department in Ansible, largely dating from the 21st century)
- Beyond Fandom at TAFF Books website, ISBN 978-1-916508-15-6 (PoD tp: ISBN 978-1-916508-16-3)
- Press release at File 770
- Additional notes by Rob Hansen (incl. on Frank Robinson "who almost made the cut but didn't")
Publication | 2023 |
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- ↑ It has claimed "over 73 thousand" since beginning, but even after some 920 words of the Eisfeld chapter were added, it is well below 72,500 including the copyright page but excluding the thrice-repeated table of contents.