kevin_standlee (
kevin_standlee) wrote2007-08-13 05:52 pm
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Interpreting Hugo Rules in a Vacuum
From Making Light, we have the story of a Wikipedia admin who is convinced that his out-of-left-field interpretation of the Hugo Award rules is more better than anyone who actually works in the field or writes those rules or maintains the official lists of winners.
Specifically, while technically a Hugo Award for one of the periodical categories is for the periodical work (Locus, Emerald City, Ansible, or in the case of Kathryn Cramer, The New York Review of Science Fiction) common usage (and common sense) refers to the editor or editors of that work as having been nominated or winning the Hugo Award. So, for instance, while the 2004 Hugo Award for Best Fanzine went to Emerald City, it's perfectly accurate and in keeping with accepted usage within the field to say that Cheryl Morgan won a Hugo Award.
Go read the discussion page on that article for this wiki-editor's somewhat askew opinion of how our awards work. I take it that by his definition, only the five "people" categories (Fan Writer, the two Artists, and the two Editors) are actually won by people. All of the rest are by works and the people responsible for those works aren't allowed to claim credit for them.
Edit, 23:10: Fixed the number and reference to "people" categories after
johnnyeponymous pointed out my mistake.
Specifically, while technically a Hugo Award for one of the periodical categories is for the periodical work (Locus, Emerald City, Ansible, or in the case of Kathryn Cramer, The New York Review of Science Fiction) common usage (and common sense) refers to the editor or editors of that work as having been nominated or winning the Hugo Award. So, for instance, while the 2004 Hugo Award for Best Fanzine went to Emerald City, it's perfectly accurate and in keeping with accepted usage within the field to say that Cheryl Morgan won a Hugo Award.
Go read the discussion page on that article for this wiki-editor's somewhat askew opinion of how our awards work. I take it that by his definition, only the five "people" categories (Fan Writer, the two Artists, and the two Editors) are actually won by people. All of the rest are by works and the people responsible for those works aren't allowed to claim credit for them.
Edit, 23:10: Fixed the number and reference to "people" categories after
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Anyone, it seems, except someone who KNOWS WHAT SHE'S TALKING ABOUT.
I have waged a lonely, but quiet (maybe I should be louder) campaign for years to have the editors' names added to the Hugo listings for the old Best Professional Magazine Award. I've seen a photograph of John W. Campbell and Evelyn Gold (representing her famously non-travelling husband Horace) shaking hands while holding the Hugos jointly won by ASF and Galaxy in this category in 1953, and I have no doubt that the editor should get the credit.
And if the editors aren't listed, then Campbell won no Hugos. Which is ridiculous.
(The one catch is, who should get the credit if the editorship changed between the eligibility period and the award presentation?)
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(Anonymous) 2007-08-15 06:13 am (UTC)(link)no subject
Chris
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BTW, Kevin, your edit needs re-editing :-)
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The "Hugos" line item is roughly $300 of the total $4000 budget (exc banquet tickets).
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Interpreting Hugo Rules in a Vacuum
Craig.
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