The 2023 Hugo Awards: A Report on Censorship and Exclusion

This report is being released simultaneously on File770 and Genre Grapevine and is also available to download as an e-book epub file and as a PDF.


By Chris M. Barkley and Jason Sanford

“You acquire information and you convey the information. That’s the job.”

++ National Public Radio News Director, Editor and Reporter Emeritus Linda Wertheimer, February 7, 2024

INTRODUCTION

By Chris M. Barkley: The earliest documentation of the phrase, “News is only the first rough draft of history,” is attributed to a 1943 New Republic book review written by Alan Barth. The phrase quickly caught on with other writers and journalists at the time and for many decades, the late Washington Post president and publisher Philip L. Graham was wrongly given credit for the phrase.

For journalists, such as myself for example, the phrase rings true on a very basic and emotional level. And while what you are about to read here will be considered shocking and a seismic event in the history of SF fandom and the World Science Fiction Society in particular, it is my hope that it is just the beginning of a greater story yet to be told.   

What my colleague and co-author Jason Sanford and I are going to outline in this lengthy report will most certainly not be the final word on the extraordinary events and actions surrounding the 2023 Hugo Awards that were adjudicated and presented by the 81st World Science Fiction Convention held in the city of Chengdu in China in October of 2023.

To understand how extraordinary these events were, I refer back to the 79th Worldcon held in Washington D.C. in December of 2021; a bid from fans based in The People’s Republic of China won the bid for the 81st Worldcon over the bid from Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada by a wide margin.

This in itself was not unusual, except that there was a considerable amount of consternation on the method and accounting of the Chinese ballots. A majority of the ballots from China had email addresses and not the traditional street addresses that fans in other parts of the world usually provide.

The DisCon III committee allowed the contested votes and the Chengdu bid was declared the winner.

Almost immediately there were signs that the Chengdu convention committee may not have expected to win; the one-sheet announcement had no guests of honor, hotel information or membership rates listed. Most alarmingly, several vital convention committee spots were either vacant or non-existent. 

In the intervening twenty-one months, there were long periods of silence from the concom, which caused a great deal of concern among many SF fans and convention organizers as well. 

This period was followed up by a frenzy of activity. First came the announcement of the author Guests of Honor, the Hugo Award winning novelists ‎Liu Cixin from China and Canadian Robert J. Sawyer and Russian SF author Sergey Lukianenko.

Lukianenko, who was mostly unknown to readers and fans in the West, turned out to be an ardent supporter of Russian dictator Vladimir Putin and subsequently made inflammatory comments about his support for the unprovoked war against Ukraine, which began in February of 2022.

In addition, the Chengdu Worldcon was heavily criticized because it was being held under the auspices of an authoritarian regime which regularly spied on, discriminated against or jailed political dissenters, religious minorities, writers, artists, booksellers and publishers. There were also allegations that the government was colluding with business interests to build the venue the convention would be held in. The delays in the construction of the facility moved the date of the start of the Worldcon from early August to mid-October.

But, against all odds, the Chengdu Worldcon was staged successfully and was widely acclaimed by all those who attended, including myself.

I was invited by the Worldcon Convention Committee and its hosting organization, the Chengdu Science Fiction Society as a finalist in the Best Fan Writer category. (Full Disclosure: My airfare, lodgings and meals were paid for by the convention. I gave no considerations to the Worldcon in return for my attendance).

The Science Fiction Museum turned out to be a fabulous site for the proceedings, the panels were well attended, presentation areas were spectacular and the Hugo Awards Ceremony came off without a hitch.

But, having attended thirty-one previous Worldcons, there is no such thing as a convention without some problems or complications; the main one was that I heard first hand of complaints by attendees that there were a limited number of tickets for the main events, the opening ceremonies, the Hugo Awards ceremony and closing ceremonies.

The only curious thing I noticed was that the long list of nominations and the voting results, which are usually out soon after the ceremony, were not released. In fact, that was still the case by the time I left China, which was two days later.

The final voting results were finally published on December 3, 2023, forty-six days after the end of the Chengdu Worldcon. There was no explanation for the delay.

And on January 20th, ninety-one days from the opening of the convention, the Long List of nominees was published on TheHugoAwards.org.

There was a firestorm of outrage, condemnation, speculation and rumors of malfeasance surrounding the absence of the works of novelist R.F. Kuang (Babel), screenwriter and producer Neil Gaiman (The Sandman), fan writer Paul Weimer, and Xiran Jay Zhao — who would have been an Astounding Award nominee for Best New Writer — despite having enough nominations to make the Final Ballot.

At the time of its release, no further explanation was given by the Chengdu Worldcon Convention Committee or Hugo Award Administrators, other than the works in question were ruled not eligible.

Both Jason and I have taken care to diligently gather evidence to answer the following questions:

  • Who was responsible for the “not eligible” rulings?
  • Was there evidence to support marking these particular works “not eligible”?
  • Why were these particular works chosen?
  • To what extent was the Chinese Communist Party and business interests involved?
  • What measures should be taken to ensure that the disenfranchisement of future nominees is never repeated?

This report, prepared by myself and Jason Sanford, is not meant to be the final word on what happened at this Worldcon. We are hoping that others, both here and abroad, will follow in our journalistic footsteps and come forward with more information and details about these events.

We hope that this is not the last inquiry into the curious, shocking and ultimately devastating story that we hope will bring about changes in how Worldcons are run and how the Hugo Awards are administered. We also acknowledge that this report will be quite upsetting to the fannish community but we hope that exposing the truth will also lead to the first steps in healing these social and political wounds ailing us.

As journalists, we are dedicated to be fair, accurate, and equitable in our pursuit of the truth. We are lucky that we live in an open society where inquiries like this are not only legal, but possible.

Jason, I, and other dedicated journalists like the recently retired Linda Wertheimer (whom I quoted above) know that we carry a sacred responsibility to get it right and convey it directly to you, factually and without bias.

++ Chris M. Barkley — 14 February 2024

LEAKED EMAILS AND FILES REVEAL POLITICAL CONCERNS RESULTED IN INELIGIBILITY ISSUES WITH 2023 HUGO AWARDS

By Chris M. Barkley and Jason Sanford: Emails and files released by one of the administrators of the 2023 Hugo Awards indicate that authors and works deemed “not eligible” for the awards were removed due to political considerations. In particular, administrators of the awards from the United States and Canada researched political concerns related to Hugo-eligible authors and works and discussed removing certain ones from the ballot for those reasons, revealing they were active participants in the censorship that took place.

When the Hugo Award voting and nomination statistics were released, no detailed explanation was given for why multiple authors and works were deemed “not eligible” even though they had enough nominations to make the award’s final ballot. The only official explanation came from overall Hugo Awards administrator Dave McCarty, who said “After reviewing the Constitution and the rules we must follow, the administration team determined those works/persons were not eligible.”

However, emails and files released by another member of that Hugo administration team, Diane Lacey, shows that the rules “we must follow” were in relation to Chinese laws related to content and censorship.

Lacey previously served as an administrator for the Hugo Awards in 2009, 2011, and 2016, and was the lead Hugo administrator for Chicon 7 in 2012. The 2023 Hugo Award Administration Team for the 81st World Science Fiction Convention in Chengdu were comprised of the following people according to the official Hugo Awards website: Dave McCarty, Ben Yalow, Ann Marie Rudolph, Diane Lacey, Shi Chen, Joe Yao, Tina Wang, Dongsheng Guo, and Bo Pang.

While the official Hugo Awards website doesn’t list Kat Jones as an administrator, the emails Lacey shared show Jones was involved in working on the awards. Lacey also confirmed this in an interview, as did Jones who said in an email exchange that “I did a small amount of work in the margins of the 2023 Hugo process, but was nowhere near any decisions.”

In an apology letter released to this report’s authors, Diane Lacey wrote “Let me start by saying that I am NOT making excuses, there are no adequate excuses. I am thoroughly ashamed of my part in this debacle, and I will likely never forgive myself. But the fans that have supported the Hugos, the nominees, and those that were unfairly and erroneously deemed ineligible in particular, deserve an explanation. Perhaps the only way I can even begin to ease my conscience is to provide one.”

The emails Lacey shared are extremely illuminating about the entire controversy. In an email from Dave McCarty dated June 5, 2023, he announced to the Hugo Award administration group that “This is us, the group of folks that are validating the Hugo finalists.”

None of the Chinese members of the administration team were listed as recipients in any of the emails examined for this report, only administrators who were from Western countries.

After discussing technical details of the work in the June 5th email, McCarty wrote “In addition to the regular technical review, as we are happening in China and the *laws* we operate under are different…we need to highlight anything of a sensitive political nature in the work. It’s not necessary to read everything, but if the work focuses on China, taiwan, tibet, or other topics that may be an issue *in* China…that needs to be highlighted so that we can determine if it is safe to put it on the ballot (or) if the law will require us to make an administrative decision about it.”

On June 5, Kat Jones asked McCarty for a “list or a resource you can point us to that elaborates on ‘other topics that may be an issue *in* China’?”

McCarty responded on June 5 at 7:18 pm saying “At the moment, the best guidance I have is ‘mentions of Hong Kong, Taiwan, Tibet, negatives of China’. I will try to get better guidance when I have a chance to dig into this deeper with the Chinese folks on the committee.”

On June 6, Kat Jones wrote an email to the administration group titled “Best Novel potential issues.” In the email, Jones raised concerns about the novels Babel, or the Necessity of Violence by R. F. Kuang and The Daughter of Doctor Moreau by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. Jones wrote that Babel “has a lot about China. I haven’t read it, and am not up on Chinese politics, so cannot say whether it would be viewed as ‘negatives of China’” while adding that The Daughter of Doctor Moreau talked “about importing hacienda workers from China. I have not read the book, and do not know whether this would be considered ‘negative.’”

Babel, which won the Nebula Award for Best Novel, ended up being deemed “not eligible” for the Hugo Awards despite having 810 nominations, more than enough to make the final ballot. The Daughter of Doctor Moreau was not removed from the ballot.

When the authors of this report reached out to Kuang for comment, her publicist said by email that due to her academic schedule and writing deadlines Kuang was unavailable for an interview.

In addition to being involved in work on last year’s Hugos, Kat Jones is the current overall Hugo Awards administrator for the 2024 Worldcon in Glasgow, Scotland.

In an emailed statement in response to a request for comment, Jones said she was concerned that the “confidential Hugo Award eligibility research work product that was ‘leaked’” may be incomplete or modified, and that she was “shocked that this extremely extremely confidential material was shared in the first place.”

“In relation to my involvement with Chengdu,” she added, “as the previous Hugo administrator from Chicon8, there is a necessary handover aspect from administrator-to-administrator. Then in addition, at the request of the Chengdu team I assisted with eligibility research for some of the English language works/creators in June 2023. I performed some of the 2023 Hugo Awards eligibility research on some of the English-language potential finalists. …

“For Chengdu, I conducted the eligibility research as instructed by the 2023 Hugo Award Administrator, and asked for clarifications where instructions were not clear. I did have concerns, and I shared them with the Administrator. Those concerns you should have evidence of if you have access to all communications. I was not involved in the evaluation of the data we flagged – and you’ll note in those emails we all expressed confusion over the vague instructions and had no idea whether anything we were mentioning was an actual problem. I had serious concerns at this point about this process. I then stepped back and did no further work for the Chengdu Worldcon after the first pass of eligibility research. I only had visibility into that first step as a Hugo researcher. I did not ever and do not have visibility into why the choices that were made, were made.”

At the end of her statement, Jones said “I would not be willing to participate in any way in the administration of an award under such circumstances again.  I don’t think we, as a community, should put our Hugo Award administration teams in this kind of no-win situation. The safety, wellbeing, and freedom of our community members is a whole different kind of consideration.”

The entire statement from Jones can be downloaded here.

The American and Canadian Hugo Award administrators also examined political concerns around the finalists for the Astounding Award for Best New Writer. In an email dated June 7, 2023, Lacey raised possible issues with regards to Xiran Jay Zhao, Naseem Jamnia and Sue Lynn Tan. Xiran Jay Zhao ended up being deemed “not eligible” despite being a finalist in that same category the year before. Naseem Jamnia made the final ballot while Tan appears to have not had enough nominations to make the final ballot.

The Hugo Awards category that received the most concerns in the email chain was Best Fan Writer. As Kat Jones wrote in an email dated June 7, 2023, “This category has the potential to be problematic, under the constraints you’ve listed, for most non-Chinese fan writers.” Jones then detailed items of possible concern for numerous fan writers including the two authors of this report along with Paul Weimer, Bitter Karella and several writers who subsequently did not receive enough nominations to qualify for the 2023 final ballot such as Alex Brown (a 2022 Hugo finalist in this category), Camestros Felapton (a 2018 Hugo finalist) and Alasdair Stuart (a three-time Hugo finalist).

Paul Weimer would eventually be deemed “not eligible” for the award despite meeting eligibility requirements in the constitution of the World Science Fiction Society, which lists the rules governing the Hugo Awards. Among the concerns Jones raised about Weimer’s writings were him having traveled to Tibet, him having a Twitter discussion with Jeannette Ng about Hong Kong along with mentioning Hong Kong and Tiananmen Square on that social media platform, expressing support for the Chengdu Worldcon while also sharing negatives about the Chinese government in a Patreon article, and writing a review of S.L. Huang’s The Water Outlaws where Jones said Weimer praises Huang for “tak[ing] one of the pillars of Chinese literature and reinvent[ing] it as a queer, feminist retelling of an important and nation-defining story.”

It should be noted that Mr. Weimer was nominated for the Hugo Award as fan writer on the 2020-2022 Hugo Award final ballots and last year for Best Fanzine as one of the editors of Nerds of a Feather.

In an interview on February 11, 2024, Weimer said he only found out he was declared “not eligible” for the Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer when the complete Hugo nomination and voting statistics were released. He confirmed he was eligible for the Best Fan Writer Award by virtue of publishing more than 60 works in various places.

“I had more ‘fan writer’ somethings than you can shake a stick at … by any definition of the word,” he said.

Weimer also confirmed that, despite the research done on him by the Hugo administrators, he has never visited Tibet. Instead, he had previously traveled to Nepal and Vietnam.

When told about the political research the Hugo administrators did on him, Weimer’s initial response was very pointed: “Well fuck,” he said, noting that he doesn’t curse that often but a precision f-bomb seemed appropriate here.

“I was afraid that in the end this was going to come down to soft or hard or some kind of censorship once things started leaking out,” Weimer said. “I mean, they came up with a dossier on all of us and went through stuff from 10 years ago? I mean, I honestly think that the Hugo committee are cowards. I would like to hope that if I was in the position of Dave McCarty and the others I’d have simply said we can’t hold the awards under these conditions and just cancel the fucking things rather than going through political dossiers. This is the worst possible outcome.”

Strangely, neither the emails nor other supporting files shared with the authors explain why the episode “The Sound of Her Wings” from Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman TV series was ruled ineligible. When asked about this, Diane Lacey said she wasn’t sure who reviewed finalists for the Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation but it wasn’t her, Kat Jones or any other associate administrators.

At the time of publication, Gaiman has not responded to a request for an interview. A request for comment with Xiran Jay Zhao is also still pending.

The emails provided by Diane Lacey can be downloaded here.All emails examined by the authors are included in that document. Personal email addresses of the people on the Hugo Award administration team have been redacted. In addition, the name of one Hugo administrator who was cc’d on the shared emails but didn’t respond to any of the emails was redacted. Otherwise the emails haven’t been altered or edited in any way. The authors of this report initially received these emails in a printed format. Some of the emails in the combined PDF are from a scanned version of the print copies.

In addition to the emails, Lacey also shared other supporting documents, including a “validation” spreadsheet where comments were shared by the Western Hugo administrators about different Hugo finalists and potential finalists. Comments on the finalists ranged from “possible issues” to “minor possible issues” to “no issues.”

One interesting aspect of the “validation” spreadsheet is it appears to show a number of Chinese works that may have been removed from the final ballot. For example, in the Best Novel category, four Chinese novels are listed including We Live in Nanjing by Tianrui Shuofu. None of these novels made the final ballot.

In both Diane Lacey’s apology letter and an interview, she said some of these Chinese works were removed due to “collusion in a Chinese publication that had published a nominations list, a slate as it were, and so those ballots were identified and eliminated.”

However, the Hugo administrators from the United States and Canada appear to have only examined works and authors who were from the Western world and who mainly published in English. The “validation” spreadsheet shows that the Western administrators did not raise concerns about any of the Chinese authors or works on that spreadsheet, only about Western-based authors and works originally published in English.

Because of this, it is possible some of these Chinese works were removed for other reasons than slating.

While the emails from the Hugo administrators don’t reference overall Hugo Awards committee decisions or any specific orders from the Chinese government, a post reported to be from a Sichuan government website discusses work done to censor works related to last year’s Worldcon.

In the post, the Propaganda Department of the Sichuan Provincial Committee of the Communist Party of China stated that “Three special groups reviewed the content of 1,512 works in five categories, including cultural and creative, literary, and artistic, that were shortlisted in the preliminary examination of the Chengdu World Science Fiction Convention, conducting strict checks on works suspected of being related to politics and ethnicity and religion, and putting forward proposals for the disposal of 12 controversial works related to LGBT issues.”

The post was later deleted.

Because the post was deleted, it is difficult to prove its authenticity. However, the post does tie in with language from the Chengdu Worldcon’s second progress report that was shared by ErsatzCulture on X-Twitter on January 20 and by Nibedita Sen on Bluesky on January 23. That language stated “Eligible members vote according to the ‘one person, one vote’ rule to select Hugo Award works and individuals that comply with local laws and regulations.” [emphasis added]

It’s also possible self-censorship was undertaken due to fears of what might happen if certain finalists made the final ballot, or due to pressure from financial interests and businesses in China not wanting to upset a major investment opportunity. As reported by China.org.cn, “Investment deals valued at approximately $1.09 billion were signed during the 81st World Science Fiction Convention (Worldcon) held in Chengdu.”

As Lacey said in an interview, “The things that were marked ineligible, was it local pressure from the government or was it business interests? I can’t answer that. From my knowledge, I would probably say business interests.”

In an interview conducted on February 4 in Chicago, Dave McCarty said that the Chinese government was not indirectly involved in the Hugo Awards “except insofar as the government says what the laws are in the country. … So the government of China says what’s cool in China and the people just operate inside of the bounds of what’s cool, which is exactly the same way that you and I work here.”

What McCarty appears to be referring to is self-censorship. As discussed in the academic article “The Cost of Humour: Political Satire on Social Media and Censorship in China,” there is a “red line” around certain forbidden topics in the country. Because people don’t know exactly what the red line is, and because the punishment for crossing the line can be so severe, “self-censorship is the only way to protect themselves and lower the risk.”

In recent years, this practice of self-censoring has spread to numerous Western organizations and groups that work in or have dealings with China, including Hollywood studios, technology companies, and Ivy-League schools.

Regardless of whether official government censorship took place or if it was self-censorship, what is certain is that the Hugo Award administrators from outside of China were actively involved in researching issues that enabled this censorship.

In an email dated June 7, 2023 at 6:18 PM and sent to the Western Hugo administrators, Dave McCarty said “Tomorrow I have a 4 hour meeting with my chinese counterpart to look at ballot detail and determine if any ballots are to be voided (which happens with frequency so that it’s not *really* that controversial if we determine we need to do it) as well as what things we need to move categories.” The identity of this Chinese counterpart remains unknown at this time.

McCarty then added “The chairs and the administrators will review the items we’ve highlighted in research Friday evening if we have enough time after the ballot review…otherwise we’ll be looking at it on Saturday (China time, of course, so we’re about 13 hours ahead of you).”

This statement, along with McCarty’s earlier email saying the administrators will “determine if it is safe” to put finalists on the ballot or “if the law will require us to make an administrative decision about it,” shows that the research the Western administrators did on Hugo Award finalists was used by the Chengdu convention chairs and administrators to determine who would be on the final ballot.

Lacey confirmed in an interview that this is what happened. “We were supposed to identify any issues and pass them on,” she said. “The decisions were above our heads.”

As Lacey explained in more detail in her apology letter, “We were told to vet nominees for work focusing on China, Taiwan, Tibet, or other topics that may be an issue in China and, to my shame, I did so. Understand that I signed up fully aware that there were going to be issues. I am not that naïve regarding the Chinese political system, but I wanted the Hugos to happen, and not have them completely crash and burn.”

Since the release of the Hugo Award nomination statistics on January 20, Western fandom has been outraged over what happened while multiple mainstream media outlets including The Guardian, Publishers Weekly, and Esquire have covered the story. In addition, there have been unverified reports of fans in China who are also angry at having their first Worldcon tainted by this affair.

In the initial week after the release of the statistics, multiple posts by Chinese fans were translated and shared in the Western world, such as a thread of comments in a Bluesky thread shared by Angie Wang. And Zimozi Natsuco, a genre fan from China, published an essay on File770 describing shock and anger at what happened while also giving a glimpse behind the scenes at what might have gone down.

However, in recent weeks posts like these from Chinese fans have been harder to find. According to a report by Ersatz Culture on File770 released on January 27 (see item #8 at link), posts related to the Hugo Awards controversy in China began disappearing around this time.

This report’s authors attempted to reach out to Chinese genre fans for comment, but did not receive any responses in time to include in this report.

An explanation for what might be happening came from Pablo Vazquez, a traveling genre fan and co-chair of the 12th North American Science Fiction Convention in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Vazquez is also well known for his connections with genre fans around the world.

When Vazquez was asked if he could help connect the authors with any fans in China who might comment for this report, he said “I’m sorry. They do not want to speak to the media even anonymously.”

As Vazquez stated in a follow-up comment, “I have a lot of love for Chinese fandom and my friendships and connections there run deep. That’s a real and vibrant fandom there that is, like us, wanting very little to do with their government being involved in their fandom. They definitely don’t think it’s their government and instead think its corporate interests or, even worse, a fan/pro organization. Honestly, they seem more scared by that than anything else which saddens me to see and despite multiple attempts to get them to share their story they seem really hesitant.”

He elaborated further: “They don’t seem to fear official reprisal (the CPC seems to want to find who’s responsible for embarrassing them on the world stage actually) but rather ostracization from their community or its outright destruction. If I were to hazard a guess, the way we blew up this affair in the international media has now put this fandom in very serious trouble. Previously, it was one of the few major avenues of free speech left in China. Now, after all this, the continuation of that freedom seems highly unlikely.”

In the days following the January 20th release of the nomination Long List, several forums have been created online and all of them are calling for the Hugo Awards to be separated from the control of the sitting Worldcon and amending the Constitution of the World Science Fiction Society (WSFS) to accomplish this.

In Dave McCarty’s February 4th interview, he said he was opposed to separating the Hugos from Worldcon, calling it “entirely wrong headed.”

“Even though I am certain that every administration decision I made was correct, I don’t think that anybody would ever give me this job again,” McCarty said in the interview. “The answers that I’ve got for the administration decisions, all I can say is again, after reviewing this Constitution and all the other rules we must follow, the administration team ruled that these works were ineligible, which absolutely, categorically is our right to do, you know, that’s right there in the WSFS Constitution.”

A full transcript of the File 770 interview with Dave McCarty can be found here.

When Paul Weimer was asked if he supported separating the Hugos from each local Worldcon, he said, “I was already moderately inclined toward that idea and now I’m more inclined. Clearly we need third-party auditing of the ballot and the whole process as a standard practice. Custom is not strong enough. Custom failed here. It wasn’t a failure in Chengdu, it was a failure here. We need guardrails of multiple types. Because otherwise people are going to stop trusting the Hugo results and that will be the death of the awards.”


OBSERVATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS

By Jason Sanford: In a recent article in Esquire about the Hugo Awards controversy, I talked about how the science fiction and fantasy genre saved my life. I still remember how as a kid certain SF/F novels and stories gave me an escape from horrific days while also opening my mind to new possibilities. These stories also revealed to me that other people saw the world in similar ways to myself.

All of this gave me the drive to not give up and to continue moving forward. And in a major way, I found the stories that illuminated and saved my life through the Hugo Awards. Back then I read every Hugo winner and finalist I could find. While I didn’t agree with or even like many of them, they were still the standard by which I approached the SF/F genre.

When I grew up and began writing my own SF/F stories, I realized the idealized version of the Hugos from my youth didn’t exist. The Hugo Awards, like all awards, were flawed. Some stories that deserved to be finalists never made the ballot. Other works that did likely shouldn’t have been there. And that’s before getting into the political infighting, lack of diversity, lack of inclusion, and other issues that have plagued the awards for decades.

No, the Hugo Awards aren’t perfect. However, what I still love about the Hugos is how they result from thousands of people across fandom working together to honor stories and authors. I love how readers continue to discover new authors and stories thanks to the words “Hugo Award finalist” or “Hugo Award winner.” I love seeing the excitement in an author’s face when they’re nominated for or win a Hugo.

I also respect how each problem that pops up with the awards is examined and dissected by the genre as a whole until maybe, eventually, possibly, a solution is found.

Now the Hugos are facing the biggest crisis in their history.

Make no mistake; the 2023 Hugo Awards were censored because certain authors and works were deemed to have too many political liabilities, at least from the viewpoint of the Chinese government. While it’s unclear if this was official censorship from the Chinese government or self-censorship by those afraid of offending governmental or business interests, we can now be certain that censorship indeed took place.

However, what also disturbs me is that the administrators of the Hugo Awards from the United States and Canada, countries that supposedly support and value free speech, appear to have been active participants in this censorship.

Let me say that again because there are too many people who believe all this happened solely because of the Chinese government: The administrators from the United States and Canada appear to have helped censor the Hugo Awards!

As detailed in the emails and files examined by myself and Chris Barkley, these Western administrators took it upon themselves to research political concerns about many of the finalists. I was one of those finalists they researched and let me tell you, this is the first time I’ve seen what amounts to a political dossier being created on what I’ve said and done. It’s not a good feeling.

That this happened in conjunction with the Hugo Awards sickens me even more.

I know the Hugo Award administrators from the United States and Canada were in a tough spot. They deeply cared about both Worldcon and the Hugos and wanted both to be successful. But in their attempt to do that, they took actions that go against the very heart of what the awards should represent.

This didn’t have to happen. The administrators could have refused to research the political issues around various award finalists. They could have spoken out when these issues first emerged. They could have told the entire SF/F genre what was happening before the awards were held.

Instead, the true story is only now coming out.

Ironically, while the Western Hugo administrators appear to have taken these actions in an attempt to protect both the Hugos and Worldcon, the result has been the exact opposite. This controversy has deeply hurt fandom in both the Western world and in China.

In the leadup to the Chengdu Worldcon, I wrote about speaking with many of the SF/F fans from China who went to the 2022 Worldcon in Chicago. I noted that we all love science fiction and fantasy and how, despite my disagreements with many actions of the Chinese government, I hoped the Chengdu Worldcon would help bring together our shared international fandoms.

Instead, as Chris and I documented in this report, it now appears SF/F fans in China are fearful of possible repression resulting from the Hugos controversy.

It’s my sincere hope that in the years to come we all remember that the regular SF/F fans in China didn’t want this to happen. They are as horrified as Western fans are by all of this. Instead of blaming China’s genre fans, we should work to ensure this issue with the Hugo Awards never happens again.

I want to thank Diane Lacey for providing these emails and files to Chris and myself. This is an amazing act of bravery and was undertaken because Lacey deeply cares about the Hugo Awards. I highly commend her for her work in revealing all this to the world. I also urge everyone to read her apology letter.

The SF/F genre has a lot of work in the coming months and years. We must ensure nothing like this ever happens again. The first opportunity for change will happen this year at the Worldcon in Glasgow. During the business meeting, proposals to decouple the Hugos from Worldcon will be raised and must be approved. You can read the beginning of proposals to do this in these posts by Chris Barkley and Cheryl Morgan.

The World Science Fiction Society (WSFS) must also start the process of incorporating so they have the actual power to deal with issues like this in the future. If we want Worldcon to exist a decade from now, the WSFS must change.

The Hugo Awards remain one of the most prominent and visible worldwide icons of the science fiction and fantasy genre. The awards must be saved. The good news is the genre has the power to do just that.


Jason Sanford is a science fiction and fantasy writer who’s also a passionate advocate for fellow authors, creators, and fans, in particular through reporting in his Genre Grapevine column. His first novel Plague Birds was a finalist for both the Nebula Award and the Philip K. Dick Award.


OBSERVATIONS AND CONCLUSIONS

By Chris M. Barkley: When I received the documents that are included in this report on February 3rd at Capricon 44, I did not look at them immediately. In fact, I waited until I got home in Cincinnati the next evening.

I did not read that material that day because I was attending a party honoring a very ill friend, who, as it turns out, couldn’t attend because of a medical emergency. I did not want anything to detract from my enjoying the celebration.

But once I read the first two pages of the emails provided by Diane Lacey, I was stunned, anxious, confused and finally, very angry about what I was seeing. And, as I read the remaining pages, I became even more upset to the point of being violently ill.

The Chengdu Hugo Administrators compiled what a casual observer could reasonably consider to be dossiers of the works of possible nominees, including myself and my co-author, Jason Sanford.

As you can see, these lists contain what the admins thought the People’s Republic of China’s government officials and censors may consider to be politically offensive or subversive in our works, both in the recent past and up through the year of our eligibility.

After I got over my initial shock, I realized I had a dilemma; when pursuing a story, the journalists who are chronicling the events usually do not find themselves as the subject of the inquiry. But these documents, and the truth behind them, were entrusted to me. So, as far as I was concerned, there was no way I could avoid being involved.

I also realized I could not do a report on this story alone. For a brief while, I considered enlisting the help of mainstream reporters. But after reading several recent news articles about the Hugo controversy, I found that they lacked the insight about SF fandom that was needed to bring in a sense of context to what was happening.

I decided that whomever I chose I had to have an insider’s knowledge of fandom and be a very good writer in their own right as well. So, I called in my fellow nominee and professional journalist Jason Sanford.

Once he was apprised of the evidence I had in hand, he did not hesitate to jump in and provide an invaluable perspective of what we should write. In fact, Jason provided the bulk of the third person narrative of this report.    

And as we wrote, we knew that the truth we were revealing would have immediate and lasting consequences for everyone in science fiction fandom, here in North America and internationally.

I have remarked to my partner that I don’t believe in fate. I don’t believe that everything that happened, from my surprise nomination last year, the offer of attending the Chengdu Worldcon, winning a Hugo Award for Best Fan Writer and being personally embroiled in the controversy that followed in its wake was not fated to happen.

Everything that did happen could have been avoided if the government of China, their associated business interests and those involved in the running of the Worldcon had not tried to “do the right thing”, culturally speaking. 

By western standards, we generally believe that suppressing the truth and then covering up the attempt to do so is considered abhorrent and should be rightly condemned. But in the People’s Republic of China, and in other totalitarian nations, speaking out and having a differing opinion can lead to being ostracized by the community, imprisonment, homelessness, becoming a refugee or death.    

For decades, each individual and independent Worldcon convention committee has had complete jurisdiction and control over the administration of the Hugo Awards. And now that we have seen the disastrous results of what might happen in repressive countries like Turkey, Hungary, Russia and Uganda, which have every right to bid under the current Constitution of the World Science Fiction Society, we can well imagine what would happen if they hosted a Worldcon.

And if that were to come to pass, would the members of the Worldcon be bound to nominate and vote on their ballots according to the “local laws and regulations” of an oppressive host country. Moreover, are the Hugo administrators beholden to assist them?

It is my opinion that Mr. McCarty and his fellow western based administrators felt by ingratiating themselves with the Chengdu Worldcon Committee and other Chinese administrators working with them, they could to interdict any direct actions of censorship by the Chinese Communist Party officials, members of the censorship board or the security services by researching and ruling on potential nominees themselves.

The resounding answer should be a very loud NO.

I think that people in fandom, including the Chengdu Hugo Award admins, seem to have forgotten that the Hugos are not supposed to be a popularity contest but a merits-based award that is a judgment of the year’s best works of fiction and non-fiction. As such, it is up to the fans, who I might add, paid out of their own pockets for the privilege to nominate and vote on an annual basis, who should have the final word on who is honored.,

Not the Hugo administrators, not the hosting convention committee and certainly not a group of government bureaucrats and censors with their own non-consensual political agenda. 

In his interview with me, Dave McCarty was adamant that the Hugo Awards should remain under the direct auspices of the Worldcon hosting the proceedings. But this debacle and the Hugo administrators role in interdicting the nominations of four participants who should have been included on the Final Ballot practically ensures that the next two WSFS Business Meetings will seriously consider severing this traditional and long standing relationship, and, at the very least, enact amendments that safeguard the nomination and voting process from any geo-political influences, here in North America and the rest of the world as well.

The firestorm of speculation and outrage that followed the release of the nomination Long List engendered a frenzied demand for the truth of what really happened, a furious yearning that could not and would not be denied by pronouncements of obfuscation, half truths or attempts at subterfuge.

Which brings us to Diane Lacey, who is the hero of this story.

Ms. Lacey, whom I have also known for many years through socializing and working on SF conventions, is very distraught about her role in what happened. What she feared the most was that when this story was released to the public, she would become a pariah in the fannish community.

It is my fervent contention, and I think that my colleague Jason would agree, that what Diane Lacey has done was brave, conscientious and ultimately, the right thing to do for herself and for the community at large.

The omissions of the works of R.F. Kuang, Neil Gaiman, Paul Weimer and Xiran Jay Zhao formed the outline of the puzzle that has been confounding all of us since January 20th. The emails, spreadsheets and Lacey’s personal reminiscences provided a great number of the pieces that provided most of the answers fans have been asking for, at least for now. As far as our investigation is concerned there was no reason to exclude the works of Kuang, Gaiman, Weimer or Xiran Jay Zhao, save for being viewed as being undesirable in the view of the the Hugo Award admins which had the effect of being the proxies Chinese government.

What remains unknown at this time is what was the extent of the involvement of the Chinese government or the business interests that surrounded the development of the Science Fiction Museum, if the business deals that emerged from the convention were orchestrated in conjunction with the convention organizers, a more detailed knowledge of the reaction from the SF fans in China, and whether or not there have been repercussions for them from this shameful incident.

I fully acknowledge the complete truth may never be known. But with the publication of this report, we now know more than we did on the morning of January 20, 2024.

And I can assure anyone reading this that the search for more explanations and answers will continue.

And so must the Hugo Awards.

The purpose of this report goes beyond a clarion call for truth and transparency, it is also a plea for healing and transformation.

The Hugo Awards have been in existence for seventy one years. It has strived to honor the best SF, fantasy, horror and works of related interest during those years. I consider it to be, as several astute critics have called it, “the literature of change”.

What has happened is a test of our will to ask the right questions, find the right answers, heal our wounds and be resilient in the face of adversity.

Because reacting out of fear is not the answer. Facing down that fear is…

“You know the greatest danger facing us is ourselves, an irrational fear of the unknown. But there’s no such thing as the unknown, only things temporarily hidden, temporarily not understood.”

-Captain James Kirk, from Star Trek, “The Corbomite Maneuver”, written by Jerry Sohl, 1966.


Chris M. Barkley has been a contributor to File 770 since 1997. He is currently a correspondent and a news editor for the daily newszine The Pixel Scroll.


This report is Dedicated to the Memory of author and former National Public Radio host Bob Edwards (1947-2024); a journalist’s journalist and the morning voice to three generations of radio listeners.


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415 thoughts on “The 2023 Hugo Awards: A Report on Censorship and Exclusion

  1. Re Camestros’s list.

    If you offer multiple choices for each category, it cannot possibly be a slate. Slates concentrate voting on one set of nominees, in order to make those nominees win. That cannot succeed when you’re recommending six different novels.

  2. It might be worthwhile– probably not but I’m going to do it anyway– to get rid of this false dichotomy about business gifts. That’s also a prevalent custom in the US, which is the reason income tax laws address how much of a deduction is allowed for business gifts and business meals and entertainment. And the ceiling is only on the tax deduction, it’s not a limit on what a business might choose to spend. I’ll never forget the furniture salesman telling me about his visit to furniture factories in North Carolina and that “those people like to party!” I’d never had the vision of sofa makers being wild and crazy guys before.

  3. @Madame Hardy: Considering that each voter can submit up to 5 nominations in each category, I don’t see why recommending multiple choices could not be a slate, at least in the way slates are commonly perceived by Hugo voters.

  4. Bryant Durrell on February 16, 2024 at 7:23 am said:

    That says that the Worldcon Committee isn’t eligible for Hugos unless they delegate all authority. It doesn’t say that they must delegate all authority. In 2023 and in the current year it’s possible that the Committee did; I assume there’s a record of this somewhere.

    You are right. It is not required. But every Worldcon ever since that rule was adopted has done so, or else there are a bunch of people who would be obliged to not volunteer to help that convention.

    The 2024 Hugo Awards Nominating Ballot says:

    The Glasgow 2024 Committee has irrevocably delegated all Hugo Administration authority to a subcommittee. Therefore, Kat Jones, Cassidy, Nicholas Whyte, Kathryn Duval, and Laura Martins are ineligible for 2024 Hugo Awards.

    I do not want to presume to speak for Glasgow 2024, but I expect that this wording will be corrected to reflect Jones’ resignation from the committee. At the request of the 2024 WSFS Division manager, I removed Jones’ name from the listing at the Hugo Awards website.

    I forgot to download a copy of the 2023 Hugo Awards nominating ballot last year, and therefore I cannot confirm this on my own observation, but to the best of my knowledge, Chengdu’s ballot had similar wording for their year. The list of names at the 2023 Hugo Awards page on the Hugo Awards website (of which I am one of the editors, and I am the person who put the names on that page) includes those people who appear to have been the declared members of the Hugo Award Administration Subcommittee, with the exception of one person whose name appeared at one point and then disappeared, for reasons about which I do not know.

    I believe that Chengdu followed the standard practice that every Worldcon has followed since the rule was adopted regarding creating a Hugo Award Administration Subcommittee and irrevocably delegating authority to it under section 3.13.

    John S / ErsatzCulture on February 16, 2024 at 8:23 am said:

    My reading of that text is that the default state is that the concom has authority over the Hugos, and it requires a specific decision to delegate authority to the Hugo team? Is that correct? If so, how is that decision communicated to the Hugo nominators, so that they can be sure that they are not nominating works/people that will be rejected as ineligible?

    The Hugo Award Nominating Ballot has a section that usually says something like “Exclusions” such at the one on the 2024 ballot that I referenced above. This is how the Worldcon tells the Hugo nominators who is ineligble and why.

    I would have thought this would have been nailed down by now.

    It is. Every Worldcon that I know of has followed it. But the rule is written in such a way that a Worldcon isn’t required to do so, although, to the best of my knowledge, Chengdu did so like every other Worldcon for as long as I can remember. Worldcon websites tend to throw away their Hugo Award nominating ballots after nominations are closed, so it’s hard to go back and point to any specific examples, but all of the older nominating ballots that I have saved (including 2018 when I was the WSFS division manager and part of that committee) include the same “Exclusions” paragraph that I mentioned above.

    bill on February 16, 2024 at 8:29 am said:

    My reading of Sec. 3:13 also does not mandate that decisions of a Hugo subcommittee be isolated from and irrevocable by the superior Worldcon committee; it just says what happens if there is such a subcommittee. It does not talk about what happens if there is a Hugo subcommittee established that the decisions of which are not irrevocable by the superior Worldcon committee, nor does is forbid such a subcommittee from being established.

    That is correct; however, it’s irrelevant in this case because to the best of my knowledge, Chengdu followed standard practice, like every other Worldcon since this rule was adopted.

    [Except as noted, such as my “ministerial” duty of editing the Hugo Awards website, everything in this message is my personal opinion. I am not the King of WSFS, Duke of Worldcon, and I am most certainly not the Boss of the Hugos.]

  5. Kevin: sincere thanks for the pointer. You don’t know me, there’s no reason why you should, and I appreciate that you took my comment as in part a sincere request for information.

  6. The rule permitting people on the Worldcon committee to retain their eligibility for Hugos was added 50 years ago.

    LOL.
    We might know that 20th century history of Chinese science fiction by Wu Yan was excluded by someone in Hugo Award because he is a member in the committee. In the same time, there’s nothing happening with SFW’s and 8 light minutes’ works.
    Someone’s understanding of the rules ( not Glyer) is worse than Putin.

  7. @Kevin Standlee: If you have Hugo nominating ballots that Fanac.org doesn’t have, please send them PDFs, because Fanac collects them along with other Worldcon publications, and they don’t have the 2018 ballot on the site.

    The nominating ballots that Fanac does have do typically include an Exclusions paragraph as you mentioned (example: Aussiecon 4, 2010).

  8. Bryant Durrell on February 16, 2024 at 10:46 am said:

    Kevin: sincere thanks for the pointer. You don’t know me, there’s no reason why you should, and I appreciate that you took my comment as in part a sincere request for information.

    And thank you for not being unhappy that I dumped a whole lot of information, which is a common complaint about my explanations.

    Joshua K. on February 16, 2024 at 11:12 am said:

    @Kevin Standlee: If you have Hugo nominating ballots that Fanac.org doesn’t have, please send them PDFs, because Fanac collects them along with other Worldcon publications, and they don’t have the 2018 ballot on the site.

    Will do. Thanks.

  9. Joshua K. on February 16, 2024 at 10:24 am said:

    @Madame Hardy: Considering that each voter can submit up to 5 nominations in each category, I don’t see why recommending multiple choices could not be a slate, at least in the way slates are commonly perceived by Hugo voters.

    Only Best Pro Art had a simple list of 5. All the other categories had more or less than 5. There’s not going to be a clear-cut-and-dried rule for saying this is or isn’t a slate test. The list has some slate features in particular that it has something of a call to action and it is a narrow list of works but it isn’t like the publisher had proven influence over a group of followers with a mission.

    On the other hand Western fans have spent years working out ways of helping people vote while staying on the right side of not making a slate…and there is no actual rule against slates (as the long fannish discussion from 2013-2017 noted).

    Also, on the leaks, it isn’t clear to me if McCarty was deleting ballots because of a slate (which would be unprecedented) or deleting ballots that were in some way not legitimate (which has precedent I think). I’m not trying to rush to defend McCarty but he might have phrased things differently if he was explaining to a broader audience.

  10. It might be worthwhile – probably not but I’m going to do it anyway …

    I’ve begun so many undertakings in fandom with that exact credo.

  11. P J Evans said:

    Who died and made you the expert on what other people should do with their Hugos?

    No one. Haven’t you heard? He’s the expert on everything fannish. Just ask him.

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  13. I was the chair of Smofcon 40 (www.smofcon40.org) in Providence RI, and would like to address why we are still charging $25 to view the program, and why we are not making the program item on the Chengdu Worldcon public.

    We stated early and often that the entire program would be recorded and available after the convention. Smofcon 40 made a huge investment in, and dedicated itself to, being fully hybrid. This technology does not come cheaply, and we in fact went to other fannish groups begging for sponsorship. Many were quite generous. (In fact, Chengdu donated $500 towards consuite snacks, and we deliberately sought out Chinese ones — difficult in an area dominated by Korean and Japanese foods. They were, by far, not our largest donor. A list of donors is on the website.)

    Because our members knew the program was being recorded, we also stated that it would be available to members only, with the exception of the “Fannish Q&A”, which is where current and upcoming Worldcon and Smofcon bids are questioned. We hoped that this would allow our members, both the ones on program and those in the audience, feel that they could speak freely.

    We were approached a month ago and asked to make the Chengdu Worldcon item public. I brought this before MCFI, the group who put on this Smofcon. (Like Worldcon and many other roving conventions, a different group runs Smofcon every year. MCFI has run the past 3 Noreascons, several Smofcons, and a World Fantasy Convention.) They decided that this recording could not be made public, due to the difficulty of getting permission not only from the speakers, but also every audience member. (Despite being held at 9am Saturday morning, it was quite crowded.)

    Some people have questioned why we are charging $25 to view the recordings. There are ongoing expenses — the server and registration system are complex and do not come free, for example. We initially thought that there wouldn’t be many people wanting to see the proceedings (who could have predicted?), and set the lowest possible reasonable price. I will point out that you get access to the full proceedings for that small fee. MCFI has committed to making the recordings available until at least the end of December 2024. We felt that, after that time, some of the information may be stale, and could not justify the ongoing expense.

    If you have any questions, please reach out to us at [email protected], and we will try to help.

  14. The Smofcon videos are hosted on YouTube, so unless something changes in the way YT operates, I’m not sure what costs would be incurred by MCFI by not keeping them around forever?

    I obviously appreciate that there lots of costs involved in organizing Smofcon and getting to the point that those videos could be produced, hence me begrudgingly forking out for the privilege of watching them $25.

    I do intend on writing “reviews” of the contents of those videos, and will be very curious to see if the wider fandom shares my opinion on what was discussed by the panel(s).

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  16. I could easily point you at the Weibo posts discussing that FB post, and others from McCarty, when Chinese fans discovered them, but by your own words “[o]rganized Chinese Fandom hasn’t given me the greatest impression in the world.”, so I doubt their opinions will change your mind.

    There was an earlier comment by me on here when the Hugo dramas first came out. Short form is that I assumed the incompetence might have been China related but was pretty sure it wasn’t Chinese government related. As, for the bajillionith time, for all the crap they do, this isn’t how they do crap.

    Also, I’m slightly puzzled by your reference to appearing in Xinhua media as some sort of appeal to authority, given their involvement in the recent ludicrous “Year of the Loong” nonsense. I guess at least they didn’t hire a notorious Saddam Hussein fanboy and Putin apologist to push the same narrative, unlike CGTN.

    Thank you for sharing that video! It was awesome. From what you’ve written though, you seem to think that lighthearted silly new years greetings by China mean we should also stop following the White House Press Office because of the annual Thanksgiving turkey pardon.

    Even if it got me less minutes of fame than the times one of my tiktoks made the list of nationally trending content, most people consider national media features (from any country) to be a big deal that indicates that the person being featured isn’t just any Joe Schmoe.

  17. Glenn Glazer: Until then, it is up to future administrators to be like Caesar’s wife.

    While I share your opinion of Lorentz’s high integrity, I would suggest that it would be better to use a different example than a misogynist proverb where an innocent woman was punished while a guilty man got off scot-free.

  18. I made this comment on the post about Diane Lacey’s letter, but I’m going to share it again here.

    After reading the Validation document, I’m now fairly convinced that what happened on the slated fiction categories is that McCarty moved up entries in the left-hand Title column while leaving the (admittedly totally-bollixed-up) EPH totals on the right — overwriting the names of the slated Chinese entries.

    This would explain:

    • McCarty stating that slated ballots were thrown out;
    • front-runner Chinese works on the Validation document not appearing on the final ballot;
    • the originally-released stats document, where an item appeared twice in the longlist;
    • strange behavior in EPH where the points from an eliminated Chinese work transferred to an English-language work, or vice-versa, English work points transferring to a Chinese work;
    • the “cliff” — which is actually caused by 1,000 Chinese fans nominating according to a recommendation list.
  19. And I would like to echo the comments of others here:

    Without knowing further whether those 1,000 nominations came from true Chinese SFF fans or from ballots cast by memberships bought wholesale by the Chinese publisher in question, I am going to presume the former and say this:

    EPH worked exactly as it was intended here.

    The intent of EPH was always that it would prevent minority slates from taking over the ballot.

    The intent of EPH was never that it would prevent a genuine majority of nominators from getting their choices onto the ballot.

     
    But I can see McCarty thinking “oh shit, if the fiction categories are composed entirely of Chinese works, Western fans are going to have my hide tacked up on the wall”. So instead, he totally fucked things up and still ended up with his hide tacked up on the wall.

  20. JJ wrote:

    While I share your opinion of Lorentz’s high integrity, I would suggest that it would be better to use a different example than a misogynist proverb where an innocent woman was punished while a guilty man got off scot-free.

    The use of the expression in English is well-known and independent of its origins. Language changes over time and you are the first person I’ve ever heard make this complaint about this phrase. Everyone else uses it for the intended meaning.

  21. @Glenn Glazer I’ve had a classical studies degree for two decades and have never heard the saying before even in classics nerd circles, presumably because it is BONKERS sexist.

    Furthermore, as a classicist, let me assure you professionally that absolutely nothing is ever independent of its origins, and that, as language changes over time, even the Romans abandoned old expressions or euphemisms and adopted new ones.

  22. eons ago (yesterday) @RedWombat said:
    What authority could actually stop a concom from deciding to use Dave and his Super Sekrit program anyway?

    Or, as Chris_R has pointed out, giving in to the ever-present burning temptation for the best programmer on the concom “to be the one to invent the software suite to rule them all that will solve all future fannish endeavours henceforth”.

    This is why I’m proposing a Permanent Hugo Software Working Group. Goddammit, I’m going to have to write this up, amn’t I?

    Remember that Dave’s program is not only Super Sekrit but it also, by his own admission in the interview with Chris, contains basic programming errors and gives incorrect results. Dave just doesn’t think they were really important or that big a deal.

  23. Is there a reason it’s not possible for someone to create and release a transcript of the SMOF panel?

  24. Applauds JJ and Mike Doyle (and their responses to Glenn Glazer).

    Wow, it’s been eons since I’ve seen a classic misogynist declaiming about the total neutrality of his use of a sexist word or phrase and complaining that everyone else agrees with him! Which clearly makes him RIGHT.

    Additional snickers at the attempt to claim that “language changes over time” (true) is connected to “the expression is independent of its context” (because if it was, dude, nobody would know who the fuck Caesar was, let alone his wife, let alone what meaning it has!)

    After all, you must remember Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra!

    p.s.: some background on the context!

  25. @JJ
    Agree with all 3 of your last comments!

    Also want to mention that McCarty moving things up on the title column and leaving the EPH stats on the right would explain the EPH stats that Marshall Ryan Maresca pointed out show highly unusal coordination of ballots that included the finalists. As well as T. Kingfisher and Seanan McGuire getting 800 some nominations in one category and only 100 some in another.

  26. As JJ points out, the point of EPH is to prevent outsized effects of slating, which was the whole Puppies problem.

    Wholesale removing of ballots and moving things on McCarty’s part, plus software that doesn’t work, led to this farrago of results.

  27. @bopu re: “Is there a reason it’s not possible for someone to create and release a transcript of the SMOF panel?”

    The videos on YouTube have (machine generated?) subtitles. They are imperfect, but no worse than the raw Barkley/McCarty interview transcripts. Smofcon could surely release them if they want, or if they are unable, I will provide the .vtt files that I downloaded from YouTube.

    (I’m not prepared to release those files unless Smofcon indicate they are happy to – I want to retain the moral high ground and not be at risk of being accused of circulating pirated content without the copyright holder’s permission.)

    For example, here’s a very crude word frequency analysis I did on topics that were discussed in the “What can we learn from Chengdu panel?” Whilst the data is far from 100% accurate due to transcription issues, I think it gives a good idea of what things the SMOFs were most interested in discussing:

    sponsor: 68
    money: 12
    business: 4
    panda: 3
    hugo: 2
    fan: 11

    (“panda” mostly refers to discussions about the visit to a panda research centre that many of the Western visitors went on after the con)

  28. The only reason to invalidate ballots is if they were 100% certain that they were made by “non-natural persons”. And I don’t see how they could be absolutely sure.

  29. Not related to the current problem but on the general topic of hugo ballot invalidation, I remember reading (maybe here?) about an incident back in the 90s (+/-) where a first novel got a whole bunch of nominations which were thrown out based on vibes and it turned out later to be the author’s pals trying to help them out. (I’m aware of the Hubbard drama from the 80s, this wasn’t that).

  30. I’ve heard the line about Caesar’s wife needing to be above reproach for decades, and only found out the story behind it just now because I looked it up. I’m not a classics scholar, I’ve just been doing a lot of random reading for decades.

  31. Jake on February 17, 2024 at 5:37 am said:
    Not related to the current problem but on the general topic of hugo ballot invalidation, I remember reading (maybe here?) about an incident back in the 90s (+/-) where a first novel got a whole bunch of nominations which were thrown out based on vibes and it turned out later to be the author’s pals trying to help them out. (I’m aware of the Hubbard drama from the 80s, this wasn’t that).

    That still wouldn’t be a valid reason to throw out ballots…unless the “pals” definitely aren’t all different people. Even in the Hubbard and the other money order situation bloc votes weren’t trashed.

  32. “Caesar’s wife”

    Note to self: thoroughly research any turn of phrase before attempting to use it on File770. The relevant point remains: the award administration must be not only fair but also visibly and verifiably fair. The appearance of favoritism or secrecy, even if the actual process is completely innocent, is almost as damaging as the actual thing.

  33. @JJ – That would indeed explain a lot of things!

    What pisses me off even more here is that if McCarty had thrown out the “slate” and re-run the numbers, it would still have been gross malfeasance, but it would have at least been consistent with his opinions about slates and the admin being able to chuck any ballots he wants.

    Just pasting the Western authors over the Chinese ones, though, is so goddamn hypocritical and sloppy. It doesn’t even get rid of the slate he was supposedly worried about, it just means Dave decided what he thought should be on the slate. I know objectively the results are the same, but the hypocrisy makes it feel worse somehow.

    It’s an honor to be nominated by the fans. Not so much to be nominated by Dave McCarty.

  34. I will talk to MCFI (again) and ask about releasing a transcript of the Chengdu panel, but I suspect the answer will be “no.” If they say yes, we’ll let Mike know. (MCFI runs on a consensus basis, so despite being Smofcon chair, I have very little power.)

  35. Lisa Hertel: You know how we fans like to make suggestions that mean a lot of work for somebody besides us. Instead of worrying about getting permission from the audience why not do that thing of blurring the parts of the video where they’re seen?

  36. Nothing in copyright law prevents a person with access to the audio of that meeting from writing a report what was said, including liberal use of quotes. They can make a transcript for their own personal use with Whisper or MS Word or various other tools (Word identifies speakers, Whisper is more accurate with text) to source the quotes, as long as they don’t quote a large fraction of the whole thing, and what they quote is newsworthy. Unless the person with access has it only after having signed a confidentiality agreement.

  37. There’s a problem with charging for watching a video on YouTube. You are, technically, monetizing that content. If you do not have specific permissions for everyone in the video, that’s a violation of YT TOS. The content could be taken down.

  38. JJ on February 16, 2024 at 6:18 pm said:

    I made this comment on the post about Diane Lacey’s letter, but I’m going to share it again here.

    After reading the Validation document, I’m now fairly convinced that what happened on the slated fiction categories is that McCarty moved up entries in the left-hand Title column while leaving the (admittedly totally-bollixed-up) EPH totals on the right — overwriting the names of the slated Chinese entries.

    Your theory would imply that the ‘cliff top’ for categories with cliff-like distributions would match the number of Chinese works including the deletions. It’s close but not quite.
    Best novel has 7 works in the cliff top. There were 2 works that vanished and 4 other Chinese works. Arguably Daughter of Doctor Moreau might be a crossover as it was on the SFW list.
    Best Series has 6 in the cliff top. There were 2 works vanished and 3 Chinese works remaining. So short by one.
    Fanzine has 7 in the cliff top. No works vanished and there were 2 Chineses nominees. So doesn’t add up at all. Of course something else might be going on etc but I think the jigsaw puzzle doesn’t quite fit into the space.

  39. Nothing in copyright law prevents a person with access to the audio of that meeting from writing a report what was said, including liberal use of quotes. They can make a transcript for their own personal use with Whisper or MS Word or various other tools (Word identifies speakers, Whisper is more accurate with text) to source the quotes, as long as they don’t quote a large fraction of the whole thing, and what they quote is newsworthy. Unless the person with access has it only after having signed a confidentiality agreement.

    @Brad Templeton: Thus we need to try it. I must say the video is astonishing to Chinese fans.

  40. People who are interested in Smofcon 40 videos should pay $25 for membership, which helps a con that could use the financial support. I joined yesterday.

  41. Aaand the spreadsheet-manipulation part of the story has just made the New York Times

    I would think that the response of “we can fix this, but for future votes, after two business meetings” is now clearly inadequate.

  42. I’m not real thrilled about the idea that it’s necessary to financially support an exclusive group whose practices are a contributing factor to attitudes like McCarty’s in order to find out what they know about how corrupt the process is and how cool they may be with that.

  43. The saddest part of all this is the gusto with which the organizers engaged in political backlisting. Someone who really doesn’t want to do it but is forced to could just mention it if there was any very public issue and turned a blind eye to anything else. They instead went back a decade for every morsel of political dissent.

    And having known many convention organizers, I can bet they did this not because they are secret CCP agents, but because they liked being able to say who is in and who is out.

    Every person who voted should sue Chengdu WorldCon. They paid to vote and their votes were not counted properly. And the 2023 awards should be considered null and voting held again.

    Diane Lacey is not a hero. she was a willing participant in political blacklisting and went whistleblower to try and save face.

  44. @Madame Hardy
    NYTimes article hidden behind paywall for me. Anything notable besides just the fact that the NYTimes is covering it?

  45. I noticed today while reading one of my atheist blogs that the story has been seen by people outside fandom (culture–they may still be fans!) and is being discussed (without a lot of the context which as far as I can tell didn’t make it into newspapers)!

    PZ Myers

  46. There’s nothing new in the NYT article other than a closing quote from Scalzi:

    The Hugos, because they are a fan-given award, are the ones that are closest to the hearts of dyed-in-the-wool science fiction fans. To have them compromised like this is a punch in the gut to a whole lot of people.

  47. I’m not real thrilled about the idea that it’s necessary to financially support an exclusive group …

    It’s not an exclusive group. They let me in.

    I can’t characterize what Smofcon 40 was about until I watch some videos, so I’ll defer a response to the rest of your comment.

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