SFRA 2008 – Wrap-Up July 18, 2008
Posted by Jason W Ellis in Conference, Science Fiction, SFRA.Tags: 2008, Conference, kansas, ku, lawrence, SFRA, wrapup
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I hope you’ve enjoyed my serialized wrap-up of the Science Fiction Research Association’s 2008 Conference held in conjunction with the Campbell Conference in Lawrence, Kansas. My apologies to everyone that didn’t make it into my account–there’s so much that I missed that I wish I could have seen and heard. Below are links to each individual entry to make catching up a bit easier if you missed an earlier installment. Thanks for stopping by!
SFRA 2008 in Lawrence = Pure Win
SFRA 2008 – Driving to Lawrence
SFRA 2008 – Sunday July 18, 2008
Posted by Jason W Ellis in Conference, Science Fiction, SFRA.Tags: 2008, business, campbell, Conference, meeting, SFRA
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With killer headache in hand, I made my way down to the SFRA business meeting on Sunday morning, the last day of the conference.
President Adam Frisch began by saying that SFRA is in “excellent shape.” Vice-President Lisa Yaszek has worked hard on recruitment measures and we now stand at 344 members strong. Treasurer Mack Hassler told us how the organization’s finances are in order, and we’re expanding the support a scholar program so that they are now “grants” that must be applied for. This is good, because there’s more to go around and it will add a valuable line to one’s vita. The four areas of funding will be travel, membership, research, and organizational grants.
Other important business concerned the transition of the sfra.org website from Virgina Tech’s servers to a private hosting company. We’re thankful for Virginia Tech’s hosting, but there are limitations to what we can do organizationally and operationally on their servers. Karen Hellekson, acting as interim Web Director, is facilitating the move and the expansion of SFRA services online.
Another organization matter concerned the addition of a position for Director of Public Relations. This person will help promote the organization under the direction of the Vice President. More on this later…
There were some convention updates on current and future SFRA meetings.
Ritch Calvin said that the 2008 SFRA meeting in Lawrence seems to be within budget.
Lisa Yaszek told us about the 2009 meeting in Atlanta, GA and sponsored by Georgia Tech and hosted by Lisa and Doug Davis. It’s going to be on June 11-14, 2009 at the Wyndham Midtown with the dual themes (one just wasn’t enough!): “Engineering the Future” and “Southern Fried Science Fiction and Fantasy.” The Guest of Honor is Michael Bishop, and Guest Authors include F. Brett Cox, Paul di Filippo, Andy Duncan, Kathleen Ann Goonan, and Jack McDevitt. I will post a full announcement soon separately.
Craig Jacobsen said that 2010 in Phoenix is on track with the theme, “Points of Contact,” and there’s a venue lined up near the airport for that meeting.
Pawel Frelik said that Poland 2011 (SFRA tries to hold its meeting in Europe every third year, this year was an exception because of the decline of the dollar) is proceeding well. He has secured institutional support, and Lublin will be a great host city with easy access from the airport to the city center, hotels, and campus.
A final project worth mentioning is that SFRA Review has worked out a deal with the University of South Florida to host back issues of the Review electronically. If you have old issues, you should drop a line to Karen Hellekson, because they need to patch some holes in their checklist for scanning (it is a destructive process, but the issues will be available to everyone online after being scanned).
In other news, dues will remain the same.
Whew. Some good-byes later and review books exchanged hands, I checked out, spoke briefly with Veronica Hollinger, and hit the road. On the way out of Kansas, I lost my toll ticket, but the toll lady was kind enough to believe that I got on the interstate at exit 202. I hit 75 mph on the way back so I wouldn’t be on the road so long and to see how much it affected my fuel economy (not much–1.5 mpg less to 39 mpg). On the way home, I saw a large billboard that looked like a green background, white text road sign that simply said “JESUS.” There’s something science fictional about the religious iconography and messages between Ohio and Kansas. Also, the worst roads that span an entire state are in Indiana.
When I pulled into Kent late Sunday evening, my odometer showed that I had driven 1,685 miles during the whole trip, and it was a great trip! Thanks to everyone that was a part of 2008 SFRA in Lawrence, Kansas. Thanks to Ritch Calvin, Karen Hellekson, and Craig Jacobsen for organizing and pulling it off without a hitch. Thanks to Kansas University, Center for the Study of Science Fiction, the Campbell Conference, Jim Gunn, and Chris McKitterick for inviting SFRA to Lawrence this summer. I had a great time, and I’m looking forward to seeing everyone again at SFRA 2009 in Atlanta, GA!
SFRA 2008 – Friday Awards Ceremony July 18, 2008
Posted by Jason W Ellis in Conference, Science Fiction, SFRA.Tags: 2008, awards, campbell, clareson, Conference, graduatestudent, marykaybray, pilgrim, SFRA, sturgeon
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On the way to the ceremony, I had the opportunity to talk to Jim Gunn and tell him that we share the same birthday (July 12). Also, I ran into Kathleen Ann Goonan, who had just arrived to the hotel after dealing with a myriad of travel complications. Luckily, she did arrive on time, and rushed to her room to prepare for the ceremony. Before leaving, she introduced me to her dad, Tom Goonan. He’s a seasoned veteran of the Second World War, and he worked with Kathy on her latest novel, In War Times. I had a great time talking with Tom on the way down the hall about the war and changes to American theaters (I brought this up after having just seen WALL-E in an old single screen theater in Akron, Ohio).
The Friday night awards ceremony was held jointly at the Holiday Inn Holidome in Lawrence, Kansas by the Science Fiction Research Association and the Campbell Conference. Master of Ceremonies for the evening was Chris McKitterick of the University of Kansas.
The ceremony began with the Campbell Conference awards–the Campbell and Sturgeon Awards. The first was the Theodore Sturgeon Memorial Award for best short fiction. For the first time ever, it was a double tie for first and second. The second place winners were “Memorare” by Gene Wolfe and “The Master Miller’s Tale” by Ian R. MacLeod. The first place winners were “Tidelines” by Elizabeth Bear and “Finistera” by David R. Moles who was in attendance at the conference.
The John W. Campbell Memorial Award for best SF novel went to Kathleen Ann Goonan’s In War Times, which justly triumphed over Michael Chabon’s The Yiddish Policeman’s Union (second place) and Ken MacLeod’s The Execution Channel (third place).
After a short break, SFRA took center stage to honor a number of its members. The first award given out was the Graduate Student Paper Award for best paper delivered by a graduate student at the previous annual conference. This year’s recipient was Joseph F. Brown for his paper delivered at last year’s SFRA in Kansas City, Missouri. He’s looking for a job now, so hook him up!
Ritch Calvin stepped up to the podium to give the next award, the Mary Kay Bray Award for “the best essay, interview, or extended review to appear in the SFRA Review in a given year.” He called Jason Ellis (me) to the stage to receive the award for two reviews–Starship Troopers (SFRA Review #280) and Brasyl (SFRA Review #281). As I walked up to the front jets of adrenalin exploded in my bloodstream and a crazy smile was pasted over my face. I thanked Ritch and then I pulled out my acceptance remarks:
I would like to thank the Mary Kay Bray Award committee, as well as the SFRA executive board and all members. Since I first joined SFRA three years ago, I’ve learned we have a great organization that I’m proud to be a member of and contribute to in order to play a part in its success. In my reviews, I hope that I help some of you out with your work just as many of you have helped with mine. Also, SFRA Review is a terrific resource that is as good as we collectively make it, so I’d like to encourage everyone to contribute more top-rate fiction, non-fiction, and media reviews.
I don’t often get an opportunity to stand in front of so many friends, so I’d like to take this occasion to thank a few of you who helped me reach this point in my career. I’d like to thank Patrick Sharp for taking a chance, Lisa Yaszek for opening the wider world of SF to me, Andy Sawyer for that Boxing Day excursion and much more, Mack Hassler for pulling for me, and Eugene Thacker for my first copy of SFRA Review.
When I got to that last part, I was choking up and some tears made it past my defenses. It wasn’t just winning the award that made me so happy, but all of the help that good folks had given me along the way. There’s many more people that I would have liked to thank while I was at the podium, like Kathy Goonan for that wonderful day at Georgia Tech and my parents for helping me afford to go conferencing this year at IAFA and SFRA. It was great winning the Mary Kay Bray Award, but it’s even better knowing that I have a lot of friends in such a supportive community of scholars.
The next award was the Pioneer Award, which is given to the “writer or writers of the best critical essay-length work of the year.” Lisa Yaszek presented this year’s award on behalf of the committee that read over 300 critical essays to determine the winner. This year’s winner of the Pioneer Award is Sherryl Vint for her March 2007 Mosaic essay, “Speciesism and Species Being in Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?“ Sherryl does fantastic work, and is deserving of this honor. And yes, I will get you that Transformers paper very, very soon!
Doug Davis took to the stage next to introduce the Thomas D. Clareson Award for Distinguished Service, which “is presented for outstanding service activities-promotion of SF teaching and study, editing, reviewing, editorial writing, publishing, organizing meetings, mentoring, and leadership in SF/fantasy organizations.” Doug had already pumped me for dirt, er, background info on this year’s winner, so it was wonderful hearing the way he wove some of my anecdotes about the recipient, Andy Sawyer of the University of Liverpool, into his speech. Andy took to the stage and gave an over-the-top acceptance speech that was hilarious and heartfelt. Afterwards, Andy told me that I’m a dead man. That’s okay, because I’m glad that Andy and I got to share the stage that night.
The final award of the evening was also the SFRA’s longest running award–the Pilgrim Award. Originally named for J. O. Bailey’s book, Pilgrims through Space and Time, it honors “lifetime contributions to SF and fantasy scholarship.” Adam Frisch announced the award winner as the UK writer and critic, Gwyneth Jones. Unfortunately, she couldn’t make it to the conference, but she asked Adam to give her acceptance speech that was a little long, but worth its weight in wittiness!
After the award ceremony drew to a close, a number of us mulled around and enjoyed the cash bar. Doug, Pawel, and I talked for awhile, and I met Anne K.G. Murphy of the Science Fiction Oral History Association. Kathy, her husband Joe, and Tom closed out the banquet room. I ended the evening talking with Jason Embry, Patrick Sharp, and Craig Jacobsen about zombies, video games, and recent movies–I hope all you guys have seen WALL-E by now, or will after reading the media review that I just emailed Ritch!
Another SFRA 2008 installment tomorrow…
SFRA 2008 – Friday July 16, 2008
Posted by Jason W Ellis in Conference, Science Fiction, SFRA.Tags: 2008, Conference, kansas, lawrence, SFRA
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Another day, another panel! I got up early and met Melissa downstairs in the lobby to go in search of Lucky Charms and other breakfast food. Cereal secured, we searched for Starbucks on Hwy 59 to no avail, so I settled for a McDonalds sausage biscuit and coffee.
Back at the Holidome, I went to Lisa Yaszek, Doug Davis, and Patrick Sharp’s panel, “Writing Science Fiction Outside the Genre.”
Doug began the panel with his presentation alternately titled, “God as Science Fiction, Science Fiction as God: Christian Fabulation for American Technoculture,” or “The Sacred and the Profane in the Short Fiction of Ted Chiang and Flannery O’Connor.” He started his paper by referencing this painting called “The Dallas Rapture, which shows how “the machine stops” following the rapture. This observation leads into his argument that proofs for God are impossible except in SF, and he listed a number of these types of stories including Bradbury’s “The Man,” Asimov’s “Reason,” and Jack McDevitt’s “Gus” (more examples here). From SF, Doug maps out four types of SF proofs of God: “1) God as computational artifact, computational universe, 2) God as engineer, divine watchmaker, 3) God as dead, apocalyptic future history, and 4) God as sense of wonder, divine world building.” He focuses on the fourth proof in the translation between the sacred and profane in the works of Ted Chiang, such as “Hell is the Absense of God” (God is part of the physics of the universe–no more faith) and “Seventy-Two Letters” (golem engineering), and Flanner O’Conner, such as “A Good Man is Hard to Find” (the Misfit is read as a time traveler) and “The Life You Save May Be Your Own” (people who fall in love with their cars). This was an entertaining and insightful presentation, and it earned “Jason’s Favorite Paper at SFRA 2008 Award!”
Patrick followed Doug with his essay, “Questing for a Genre: Silko’s Ceremony and the Boundaries of SF.” This was another interesting paper, because I had read Ceremony before in Rebecca Merren’s “Introduction to Science, Technology, and Culture” course back in 1997 or thereabouts. When I first saw the paper’s title, I thought Patrick might talk about the mestizo/hybrid Tayo. However, he went off in an unexpected, but wonderful direction. He historically situated the novel in regard to the beginning of the atomic age, not with Hiroshima, but the “Uranium Boom” on American Indian lands beginning in 1947. He juxtaposed the sacred (American Indians and their culture) in opposition to science and SF. He develops a new way of thinking about Ceremony in regards to the centrality of apocalyptic narrative focused around the pit mine and the hole in Laguna Pueblo. Silko transposes current problems (economic bust and loss of Indian heritage) into the past in Ceremony. Her text is responding to some of the same historical events and images of other apocalypse texts (e.g., Alas, Babylon or A Canticle for Leibowitz), and this is best understood in its relationship to SF, but not as a SF text. Great stuff!
Lisa rounded out the panel with a presentation titled, “Science, Fiction, and American Public Policy, or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the NSF.” She reported on her interdisciplinary work on representations and manifestations of nanotechnology as part of a NSF funded project that she’s working on with other members of the Georgia Tech community including scientists and political scientists. However, she builds the case that, “Science fiction studies teaches us to understand futurity as it has been represented in literary and cultural history. And it can teach us to understand what’s at stake in the futures that are being built for us in American nanotech public policy today.” Using her science fiction studies background, she uncovers three types of readings of nanotech public policy reports: 1) the postsingularity future, 2) technocratic utopia or cyberpunk dystopia?, and 3) mundane SF. Essentially, there’s a “sciencefictionality of public policy” that public policy pundits don’t realize is there. They are feeding into and off of the real world science and engineering going into nanotechnology as well as developing their own imaginative extrapolations of how, why, and who the nanotech winners and losers will be. Soon, an online timeline or “xtimeline” will be made available to showcase the development of nanotech public policy as uncovered by Lisa’s group. During the Q&A, audience members interested in nanotech hijacked the remainder of the session. Clearly, nanotech means a lot to people who are, perhaps, more aware of it than the public at large.
The next Friday morning panel that I attended was on “Science, Technology, and Science Fiction.” The panel had a full deck with Arthur B. Evans, Rebecca Lynn Testerman, Andy Sawyer, and Thomas Michaud.
Arthur presented a paper titled, “Life on Mars: From Science to Science Fiction to Fantasy.” This was an interesting presentation that mapped the development of humanity’s Mars imagination from early astronomical observations to their extrapolation in the works of SF and fantasy.
Rebecca’s paper titled, “Can You Hear Me Now? Cellular Phones from Fiction to Fact” was a genealogy of wireless telephony in SF.
Andy explored representations of powered flight in the 19th and early 20th century in his paper, “‘The Nations’ Airy Navies’: Foretellings and Forebodings of the Utopia in the Air.” It was interesting how there was in the early development of powered flight a link between the idea of “utopia in the air” and the chivalric real world pilots. There was something transformation about flight itself for the future. Some SF examples he covered include Olaf Stapledon’s Last and First Men, H.G. Wells’ When the Sleeper Awakes and The War in the Air, and Mary Shelley’s The Last Man. However, some earlier works revealed an almost mundaneness about balloon and air travel such as in Jane Loudon’s The Mummy!
The final presenter was Thomas, who is finishing his PhD at the Sorbonne, and he presented an essay titled, “The Use of Science Fiction at R&D Centers.” He talked to people at Orange, Électricité de France, and the European Space Agency, as well as futurologists and SF writers to find out if and to what extent SF played a part in French research and development. He found that “technofictions” play a big part in R&D and market capital by “motivating investors” and providing ideas deserving “exploration for potential” real world development. Also, SF leads to “new markets” and the possible “future of an innovation.” Thomas’ presentation was a great complement to Lisa’s earlier NSF presentation, but he also took his work in a new direction that’s summed up by one slide of his Powerpoint presentation. Without easily rebuilding the slide, I want to reproduce it thus:
ideology of SF: how to use SF to improve and stimulate capitalism
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SF–schizophrenic imaginary used for innovation
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study of collective unconscious of consumers | study of trends | SF is schizoculture
^
SF as a laboratory of the future
Great stuff! Following the panel, Mack and Sue Hassler invited Thomas and I to join them for lunch. Unfortunately, there was a long wait on our meals, but it gave us more time to talk. After Mack ran off to his panel, Thomas and I rapped about the upcoming Olympics and differences in French and American politics. I decided to skip the next panel and catch up on my sleep.
After a short nap, Melissa called me, and we decided to explore Lawrence before the evening’s award ceremony. I picked up a copy of Kick Ass #1 from Astrokitty Comics and a pristine copy of Pamela Sargent’s Women of Wonder from the Dusty Bookshelf. Melissa and I avoided the heat for awhile in Starbucks, and then it was back to the Holidome to prepare for the awards ceremony. I wrote my Mary Kay Bray Award acceptance comments, went out to Taco Johns for dinner, and then rushed back to don my tightly fitting suit–have I really gained that much weight since I was in Liverpool? And then the big show began…
SFRA 2008 – Driving to Lawrence July 15, 2008
Posted by Jason W Ellis in Conference, Personal, Science Fiction, SFRA.Tags: 2008, b-2, campbell, Conference, fueleconomy, SFRA
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I hit the road early on Wednesday, July 9, leaving Yufang holding a wet Miao Miao (she darted out the door as I was loading up) as the torrents of rain continued unabated across Ohio. I had decided before leaving that I would maximize my fuel economy in order to stretch the overall savings and convenience of driving there. My speed fluctuated between 55 and 60 mph, and I regulated my driving style so that I accelerated slow and easy. I monitored my fuel maximization progress with a ScanGauge II plugged into my car’s computer. After taking 15 hours and two fuel tanks of gas, I averaged 41.5 mpg. Saving those gallons of gas took a toll on me, and I had no trouble falling asleep that night!
On the way to the conference, I saw a number of interesting sights. A few of them included a billboard advertisement warning against drunk driving sponsored by a St. Louis funeral home, a gigantic 12-or-so story tall Christian cross next to the interstate, a McDonalds in Missouri with an enclosed reading room and fireplace rather than a playground, and a B-2 Stealth Bomber turning on final and landing to the south.