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Hugo Award

The Hugo Award is an annual literary award for the best science fiction or fantasy works and achievements of the previous year, given at the World Science Fiction Convention and chosen by its members. The Hugo is widely considered the premier award in science fiction. The award is administered by the World Science Fiction Society. It is named after Hugo Gernsback, the founder of the pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories. Hugos were first given in 1953, at the 11th World Science Fiction Convention, and have been awarded every year since 1955.

Hugo Award
Awarded forBest science fiction or fantasy works of previous year
Presented byWorld Science Fiction Society
First awarded1953
Websitethehugoawards.org

The awards were originally given in seven categories. These categories have changed over the years, and the award is currently conferred in seventeen categories of written and dramatic works. The winners receive a trophy consisting of a stylized rocket ship on a base; the design of the trophy changes each year, though the rocket itself has been standardized since 1984. The Hugo Awards are considered "the premier award in the science fiction genre",[1] and winners are often noted on book covers.

The 2022 awards were presented at the 80th Worldcon, "Chicon 8", in Chicago on September 4, 2022. The 2023 awards will be presented at the 81st Worldcon, "Chengdu Worldcon", in Chengdu, China on August 19, 2023.

Award

 
Hugo Awards through the years exhibited in Helsinki, 2017.
 
David Hartwell, Charles N. Brown, and Connie Willis pose with the 2008 Hugo Awards

The World Science Fiction Society (WSFS) gives out the Hugo Awards each year for the best science fiction or fantasy works and achievements of the previous year. The Hugos are widely considered the premier award in science fiction.[2][3][1][4][5] The award is named after Hugo Gernsback, who founded the pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories and who is considered one of the "fathers" of the science fiction genre.[6] Works are eligible for an award if they were published in the prior calendar year, or translated into English in the prior calendar year. There are no written rules as to which works qualify as science fiction or fantasy, and the decision of eligibility in that regard is left up to the voters, rather than to the organizing committee. Hugo Award nominees and winners are chosen by supporting or attending members of the annual World Science Fiction Convention, or Worldcon, and the presentation evening constitutes its central event. The selection process is defined in the WSFS constitution as instant-runoff voting with six nominees per category, except in the case of a tie.[7] The awards are split over more than a dozen categories, and include both written and dramatic works.[8]

For each category of Hugo, the voter may rank "No Award" as one of their choices. Voters are instructed that they should do so if they feel that none of the nominees are worthy of the award, or if they feel the category should be abolished entirely. A vote for "No Award" other than as one's first choice signifies that the voter believes the nominees ranked higher than "No Award" are worthy of a Hugo in that category, while those ranked lower are not.[9]

The six works on the ballot for each category are the most-nominated by members that year, with no limit on the number of stories that can be nominated. With the exception of 1956, the first years of the awards did not include any recognition of runner-up novels, but since 1959 all of the candidates have been recorded.[7] Initial nominations are made by members in January through March, while voting on the ballot of six nominations is performed roughly in April through July, subject to change depending on when that year's Worldcon is held.[10] Prior to 2017, the final ballot was five works in each category.[11] Worldcons are generally held near the start of September, and take place in a different city around the world each year.[6][12]

The idea of giving out awards at Worldcons was proposed by Harold Lynch for the 1953 convention.[13] The idea was based on the Academy Awards,[14] with the name "Hugo" being given by Robert A. Madle. The award trophy was created by Jack McKnight and Ben Jason in 1953, based on the design of hood ornaments of 1950s cars. It consisted of a finned rocket ship on a wooden base. Each subsequent trophy, with the exception of the 1958 trophy (a plaque), has been similar to the original design. The rocket trophy was formally redesigned in 1984, and since then only the base of the trophy has changed each year.[15] There is no monetary or other remuneration associated with the Hugo, other than the trophy.[7]

Retro-Hugos

Retrospective Hugo Awards, or Retro-Hugos, were added as a concept to the Hugo Awards in 1996. They are awards given for years in which no Hugos were originally awarded. Prior to 2017, they could be awarded for works in a year 50, 75, or 100 years prior, after 1939, where there was a Worldcon but where no Hugos were awarded. Retro-Hugos are given by a Worldcon in the categories that are currently in use, and are optional; some Worldcons have chosen not to award them despite a year being eligible. Even for years in which Retro-Hugos are given, not all categories receive enough nominations to receive a ballot.[7] In 2017, the eligible years were specified to be 1939–1952 and 1954, which expanded the possible years to include those post-1939 in which no Worldcon was held at all. Of the fifteen years eligible, awards have been given for eight.[7][16][17][18]

History

1950s

The first Hugo Awards were presented at the 11th Worldcon in Philadelphia in 1953, which awarded Hugos in seven categories.[19] The awards presented that year were initially conceived as a one-off event, though the organizers hoped that subsequent conventions would also present them.[20] At the time, Worldcons were completely run by their respective committees as independent events and had no oversight between years. Thus there was no mandate for any future conventions to repeat the awards, and no set rules for how to do so.[21]

The 1954 Worldcon chose not to, but the awards were reinstated at the 1955 Worldcon, and thereafter became traditional. The award was called the Annual Science Fiction Achievement Award, with "Hugo Award" being an unofficial, but better known name.[6] The nickname was accepted as an official alternative name in 1958, and since the 1992 awards the nickname has been adopted as the official name of the award.[14][22]

For the first few years, Hugo Awards had no published rules, and were given for works published in the "preceding year" leading up to the convention, which was not defined but generally covered the period between conventions rather than calendar years. In 1959, though there were still no formal guidelines governing the awards, several rules were instated which thereafter became traditional. These included having a ballot for nominating works earlier in the year and separate from the voting ballot; defining eligibility to include works published in the previous calendar year, rather than the ambiguous "preceding year"; and allowing voters to select "No Award" as an option if no nominated works were felt to be deserving of the award.[23] "No Award" won that year in two categories: Dramatic Presentation and Best New Author.[24] The eligibility change additionally sparked a separate rule, prohibiting the nomination of works which had been nominated for the 1958 awards, as the two time periods overlapped.[23]

1960s

In 1961, after the formation of the WSFS to oversee each Worldcon committee, formal rules were set down in the WSFS constitution mandating the presenting of the awards as one of the responsibilities of each Worldcon organizing committee. The rules restricted voting to members of the convention at which the awards would be given, while still allowing anyone to nominate works; nominations were restricted to members of the convention or the previous year's convention in 1963.[23] The guidelines also specified the categories that would be awarded, which could only be changed by the World Science Fiction Society board.[25] These categories were for Best Novel, Short Fiction (short stories, broadly defined), Dramatic Presentation, Professional Magazine, Professional Artist, and Best Fanzine.[26] 1963 was also the second year in which "No Award" won a category, again for Dramatic Presentation.[27]

In 1964 the guidelines were changed to allow individual conventions to create additional categories, which was codified as up to two categories for that year. These additional awards were officially designated as Hugo Awards, but were not required to be repeated by future conventions.[28] This was later adjusted to only allow one additional category; while these special Hugo Awards have been given out in several categories, only a few were ever awarded for more than one year.[8]

In 1967 categories for Novelette, Fan Writer, and Fan Artist were added, and a category for Best Novella was added the following year; these new categories had the effect of providing a definition for what word count qualified a work for what category, which was previously left up to voters.[29][30] Novelettes had also been awarded prior to the codification of the rules. The fan awards were initially conceived as separate from the Hugo Awards, with the award for Best Fanzine losing its status, but were instead absorbed into the regular Hugo Awards by the convention committee.[23]

1970s

While traditionally five works had been selected for nomination in each category out of the proposed nominees, in 1971 this was set down as a formal rule, barring ties.[23] In 1973, the WSFS removed the category for Best Professional Magazine, and a Best Professional Editor award was instated as its replacement, in order to recognize "the increasing importance of original anthologies".[31][32]

After that year the guidelines were changed again to remove the mandated awards and instead allow up to ten categories which would be chosen by each convention, though they were expected to be similar to those presented in the year before. Despite this change no new awards were added or previous awards removed before the guidelines were changed back to listing specific categories in 1977.[23][33] 1971 and 1977 both saw "No Award" win the Dramatic Presentation category for the third and fourth time; "No Award" did not win any categories afterwards until 2015.[34][35]

1980s and 1990s

In 1980 the category for Best Non-Fiction Book (later renamed Best Related Work) was added, followed by a category for Best Semiprozine (semi-professional magazine) in 1984.[36][37] In 1983, members of the Church of Scientology were encouraged by people such as Charles Platt to nominate as a bloc Battlefield Earth, written by the organization's founder L. Ron Hubbard, for the Best Novel award; it did not make the final ballot.[38] Another campaign followed in 1987 to nominate Hubbard's Black Genesis; it made the final ballot but finished behind "No Award".[39] 1989 saw a work—The Guardsman by Todd Hamilton and P. J. Beese—withdrawn by its authors from the final ballot after a fan bought numerous memberships under false names, all sent in on the same day, in order to get the work onto the ballot.[40]

In 1990 the Best Original Art Work award was given as a special Hugo Award, and was listed again in 1991, though not actually awarded, and established afterward as an official Hugo Award.[22][41] It was then removed from this status in 1996, and has not been awarded since.[42] The Retro Hugos were created in the mid-1990s, and were first awarded in 1996.[7]

Since 2000

Another special Hugo Award, for Best Web Site, was given twice in 2002 and 2005, but never instated as a permanent category.[43][44] In 2003, the Dramatic Presentation award was split into two categories, Long Form and Short Form.[45] This was repeated with the Best Professional Editor category in 2007.[46] 2009 saw the addition of the Best Graphic Story category, and in 2012 an award for Best Fancast was added.[47][48]

In 2015, two groups of science fiction writers, the "Sad Puppies" led by Brad R. Torgersen and Larry Correia, and the "Rabid Puppies" led by Vox Day, each put forward a similar slate of suggested nominations which came to dominate the ballot.[49][50] The Sad Puppies campaign had run for two years prior on a smaller scale, with limited success. The leaders of the campaigns characterized them as a reaction to "niche, academic, overtly [leftist]" nominees and the Hugo becoming "an affirmative action award" that preferred female and non-white authors and characters.[49][51] In response, five nominees declined their nomination before and, for the first time, two after the ballot was published.[52][53] Multiple-Hugo-winner Connie Willis declined to present the awards.[54] The slates were characterized by The Guardian as a "right wing",[49] "orchestrated backlash"[55] and by The A.V. Club as a "group of white guys",[56] and were linked with the Gamergate controversy.[50][57][58] Multiple Hugo winner Samuel R. Delany characterized the campaigns as a response to "socio-economic" changes such as minority authors gaining prominence and thus "economic heft".[59] In all but the Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form category, "No Award" placed above all nominees that were on either slate, and it won all five categories that only contained slate nominees.[52] The two campaigns were repeated in 2016 with some changes, and the "Rabid Puppy" slate again dominated the ballot in several categories, with all five nominees in Best Related Work, Best Graphic Story, Best Professional Artist, and Best Fancast.[60]

In response to the campaigns, a set of new rules, called "E Pluribus Hugo", were passed in 2015 and ratified in 2016 to modify the nominations process. Intended to ensure that organized minority groups cannot dominate every finalist position in a category, the new rules define a voting system in which nominees are eliminated one by one, with each vote for an eliminated work then spread out over the uneliminated works they nominated, until only the final shortlist remains. These rules were ratified in 2016 to be used for the first time in 2017. A rule mandating that the final nominees must appear on at least five percent of ballots was also eliminated, to ensure that all categories could reach a full set of nominees even when the initial pool of works was very large.[61] Each nominator is limited to five works in each category, but the final ballot was changed to six in each; additionally, no more than two works by a given author or group, or in the same dramatic series, can be in one category on the final ballot.[11]

In 2018 the newest permanent category, Best Series, was begun; it was run the year prior as a special Hugo Award prior to being ratified at the business meeting.[62] Another special Hugo Award, for Best Art Book, was run in 2019 but not repeated or made a permanent category.[63] The 2021 Hugo Awards featured a special Hugo award for video games. The Hugo Study Committee is evaluating a proposal for a "Best Game or Interactive Experience" category, which they or others may propose to the 2022 convention.[64][65]

Categories

Current categories
Categories Year started Current description
Best Novel 1953 Stories of 40,000 words or more
Best Novella 1968 Stories of between 17,500 and 40,000 words
Best Novelette 1955 Stories of between 7,500 and 17,500 words
Best Short Story 1955 Stories of less than 7,500 words
Best Series 2017 Series of works
Best Related Work 1980 Works which are either non-fiction or noteworthy for reasons other than the fictional text
Best Graphic Story 2009 Stories told in graphic form
Best Dramatic Presentation
(Long and Short Forms)
1958 Dramatized productions, divided since 2003 between works longer or shorter than 90 minutes
Best Semiprozine 1984 Semi-professional magazines
Best Fanzine 1955 Non-professional magazines
Best Professional Editor
(Long and Short Forms)
1973 Editors of written works, divided since 2007 between editors of novels or editors of magazines and anthologies
Best Professional Artist 1953 Professional artists
Best Fan Artist 1967 Fan artists
Best Fan Writer 1967 Fan writers
Best Fancast 2012 Audiovisual fanzines
Former repeating categories
Categories Years active Description
Best Professional Magazine 1953–1972 Professional magazines
Short Fiction 1960–1966 Stories of shorter than novel length. This category is generally treated as the same award as Best Short Story (see winners there), but it also included works of novella and novelette length.
Best Original Art Work 1990, 1992–1996 Works of art
Former categories awarded by individual Worldcons
Categories Years active Description
Best Cover Artist 1953 Artists of covers for books and magazines
Best Interior Illustrator 1953 Artists of works inside magazines
Excellence in Fact Articles 1953 Authors of factual articles
Best New SF Author or Artist 1953 New authors or artists
#1 Fan Personality 1953 Favorite fan
Best Feature Writer 1956 Writers of magazine features
Best Book Reviewer 1956 Writers of book reviews
Most Promising New Author 1956 New authors
Outstanding Actifan 1958 Favorite fan
Best New Author 1959 New authors
Best SF Book Publisher 1964, 1965 Book publishers
Best All-Time Series 1966 Series of works
Other Forms 1988 Printed fictional works which were not novels, novellas, novelettes, or short stories
Best Web Site 2002, 2005 Websites
Best Art Book 2019 Books of artwork
Best Video Game 2021 Video Games

Worldcon committees may also give out special awards during the Hugo ceremony, which are not voted on. Unlike the additional Hugo categories which Worldcons may present, these awards are not officially Hugo Awards and do not use the same trophy, though they once did.[8][66] Two additional awards, the Astounding Award for Best New Writer and the Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book, are presented at the Hugo Award ceremony and voted on by the same process, but are not formally Hugo Awards.[62][67]

Recognition

The Hugo Award is highly regarded by observers. The Los Angeles Times has termed it "among the highest honors bestowed in science fiction and fantasy writing",[68] a claim echoed by Wired, who said that it was "the premier award in the science fiction genre".[1] Justine Larbalestier, in The Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction (2002), referred to the awards as "the best known and most prestigious of the science fiction awards",[69] and Jo Walton, writing in An Informal History of the Hugos, said it was "undoubtedly science fiction's premier award".[3] The Guardian similarly acknowledged it as "a fine showcase for speculative fiction" as well as "one of the most venerable, democratic and international" science fiction awards "in existence".[70][71] James Gunn, in The New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction (1988), echoed The Guardian's statement of the award's democratic nature, saying that "because of its broad electorate" the Hugos were the awards most representative of "reader popularity".[72] Camille Bacon-Smith, in Science Fiction Culture (2000), said that at the time fewer than 1000 people voted on the final ballot; she held, however, that this is a representative sample of the readership at large, given the number of winning novels that remain in print for decades or become notable outside of the science fiction genre, such as The Demolished Man or The Left Hand of Darkness.[73] The 2014 awards saw over 1900 nomination submissions and over 3500 voters on the final ballot, while the 1964 awards received 274 votes.[74][75][76] The 2019 awards saw 1800 nominating ballots and 3097 votes, which was described as less than in 2014–2017 but more than any year before then.[77]

Brian Aldiss, in his book Trillion Year Spree: The History of Science Fiction, claimed that the Hugo Award was a barometer of reader popularity, rather than artistic merit; he contrasted it with the panel-selected Nebula Award, which provided "more literary judgment", though he did note that the winners of the two awards often overlapped.[78] Along with the Hugo Award, the Nebula Award is also considered one of the premier awards in science fiction, with Laura Miller of Salon.com terming it "science fiction's most prestigious award".[79]

The official logo of the Hugo Awards is often placed on the winning books' cover as a promotional tool.[80][81] Gahan Wilson, in First World Fantasy Awards (1977), claimed that noting that a book had won the Hugo Award on the cover "demonstrably" increased sales for that novel,[82] though Orson Scott Card said in his 1990 book How to Write Science Fiction & Fantasy that the award had a larger effect on foreign sales than in the United States.[83] Spider Robinson, in 1992, claimed that publishers were very interested in authors that won a Hugo Award, more so than for other awards such as the Nebula Award.[73] Literary agent Richard Curtis said in his 1996 Mastering the Business of Writing that having the term Hugo Award on the cover, even as a nominee, was a "powerful inducement" to science fiction fans to buy a novel,[84] while Jo Walton claimed in 2011 that the Hugo is the only science fiction award "that actually affects sales of a book".[3]

There have been several anthologies of Hugo-winning short fiction. The series The Hugo Winners, edited by Isaac Asimov, was started in 1962 as a collection of short story winners up to the previous year, and concluded with the 1982 Hugos in Volume 5. The New Hugo Winners, edited originally by Asimov, later by Connie Willis and finally by Gregory Benford, has four volumes collecting stories from the 1983 to the 1994 Hugos.[85] The most recent anthology is The Hugo Award Showcase (2010), edited by Mary Robinette Kowal. It contains most of the short stories, novelettes, and novellas that were nominated for the 2009 award.[86]

See also

References

Citations

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Sources

External links

  • Official website
  • Current rules (including Constitution) of the WSFS

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Not to be confused with the Gold and Silver Hugo Awards for film and television at the Chicago International Film Festival The Hugo Award is an annual literary award for the best science fiction or fantasy works and achievements of the previous year given at the World Science Fiction Convention and chosen by its members The Hugo is widely considered the premier award in science fiction The award is administered by the World Science Fiction Society It is named after Hugo Gernsback the founder of the pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories Hugos were first given in 1953 at the 11th World Science Fiction Convention and have been awarded every year since 1955 Hugo AwardAwarded forBest science fiction or fantasy works of previous yearPresented byWorld Science Fiction SocietyFirst awarded1953Websitethehugoawards wbr orgThe awards were originally given in seven categories These categories have changed over the years and the award is currently conferred in seventeen categories of written and dramatic works The winners receive a trophy consisting of a stylized rocket ship on a base the design of the trophy changes each year though the rocket itself has been standardized since 1984 The Hugo Awards are considered the premier award in the science fiction genre 1 and winners are often noted on book covers The 2022 awards were presented at the 80th Worldcon Chicon 8 in Chicago on September 4 2022 The 2023 awards will be presented at the 81st Worldcon Chengdu Worldcon in Chengdu China on August 19 2023 Contents 1 Award 1 1 Retro Hugos 2 History 2 1 1950s 2 2 1960s 2 3 1970s 2 4 1980s and 1990s 2 5 Since 2000 3 Categories 4 Recognition 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 Sources 7 External linksAward Edit Hugo Awards through the years exhibited in Helsinki 2017 David Hartwell Charles N Brown and Connie Willis pose with the 2008 Hugo Awards The World Science Fiction Society WSFS gives out the Hugo Awards each year for the best science fiction or fantasy works and achievements of the previous year The Hugos are widely considered the premier award in science fiction 2 3 1 4 5 The award is named after Hugo Gernsback who founded the pioneering science fiction magazine Amazing Stories and who is considered one of the fathers of the science fiction genre 6 Works are eligible for an award if they were published in the prior calendar year or translated into English in the prior calendar year There are no written rules as to which works qualify as science fiction or fantasy and the decision of eligibility in that regard is left up to the voters rather than to the organizing committee Hugo Award nominees and winners are chosen by supporting or attending members of the annual World Science Fiction Convention or Worldcon and the presentation evening constitutes its central event The selection process is defined in the WSFS constitution as instant runoff voting with six nominees per category except in the case of a tie 7 The awards are split over more than a dozen categories and include both written and dramatic works 8 For each category of Hugo the voter may rank No Award as one of their choices Voters are instructed that they should do so if they feel that none of the nominees are worthy of the award or if they feel the category should be abolished entirely A vote for No Award other than as one s first choice signifies that the voter believes the nominees ranked higher than No Award are worthy of a Hugo in that category while those ranked lower are not 9 The six works on the ballot for each category are the most nominated by members that year with no limit on the number of stories that can be nominated With the exception of 1956 the first years of the awards did not include any recognition of runner up novels but since 1959 all of the candidates have been recorded 7 Initial nominations are made by members in January through March while voting on the ballot of six nominations is performed roughly in April through July subject to change depending on when that year s Worldcon is held 10 Prior to 2017 the final ballot was five works in each category 11 Worldcons are generally held near the start of September and take place in a different city around the world each year 6 12 The idea of giving out awards at Worldcons was proposed by Harold Lynch for the 1953 convention 13 The idea was based on the Academy Awards 14 with the name Hugo being given by Robert A Madle The award trophy was created by Jack McKnight and Ben Jason in 1953 based on the design of hood ornaments of 1950s cars It consisted of a finned rocket ship on a wooden base Each subsequent trophy with the exception of the 1958 trophy a plaque has been similar to the original design The rocket trophy was formally redesigned in 1984 and since then only the base of the trophy has changed each year 15 There is no monetary or other remuneration associated with the Hugo other than the trophy 7 Retro Hugos Edit Retrospective Hugo Awards or Retro Hugos were added as a concept to the Hugo Awards in 1996 They are awards given for years in which no Hugos were originally awarded Prior to 2017 they could be awarded for works in a year 50 75 or 100 years prior after 1939 where there was a Worldcon but where no Hugos were awarded Retro Hugos are given by a Worldcon in the categories that are currently in use and are optional some Worldcons have chosen not to award them despite a year being eligible Even for years in which Retro Hugos are given not all categories receive enough nominations to receive a ballot 7 In 2017 the eligible years were specified to be 1939 1952 and 1954 which expanded the possible years to include those post 1939 in which no Worldcon was held at all Of the fifteen years eligible awards have been given for eight 7 16 17 18 History Edit1950s Edit The first Hugo Awards were presented at the 11th Worldcon in Philadelphia in 1953 which awarded Hugos in seven categories 19 The awards presented that year were initially conceived as a one off event though the organizers hoped that subsequent conventions would also present them 20 At the time Worldcons were completely run by their respective committees as independent events and had no oversight between years Thus there was no mandate for any future conventions to repeat the awards and no set rules for how to do so 21 The 1954 Worldcon chose not to but the awards were reinstated at the 1955 Worldcon and thereafter became traditional The award was called the Annual Science Fiction Achievement Award with Hugo Award being an unofficial but better known name 6 The nickname was accepted as an official alternative name in 1958 and since the 1992 awards the nickname has been adopted as the official name of the award 14 22 For the first few years Hugo Awards had no published rules and were given for works published in the preceding year leading up to the convention which was not defined but generally covered the period between conventions rather than calendar years In 1959 though there were still no formal guidelines governing the awards several rules were instated which thereafter became traditional These included having a ballot for nominating works earlier in the year and separate from the voting ballot defining eligibility to include works published in the previous calendar year rather than the ambiguous preceding year and allowing voters to select No Award as an option if no nominated works were felt to be deserving of the award 23 No Award won that year in two categories Dramatic Presentation and Best New Author 24 The eligibility change additionally sparked a separate rule prohibiting the nomination of works which had been nominated for the 1958 awards as the two time periods overlapped 23 1960s Edit In 1961 after the formation of the WSFS to oversee each Worldcon committee formal rules were set down in the WSFS constitution mandating the presenting of the awards as one of the responsibilities of each Worldcon organizing committee The rules restricted voting to members of the convention at which the awards would be given while still allowing anyone to nominate works nominations were restricted to members of the convention or the previous year s convention in 1963 23 The guidelines also specified the categories that would be awarded which could only be changed by the World Science Fiction Society board 25 These categories were for Best Novel Short Fiction short stories broadly defined Dramatic Presentation Professional Magazine Professional Artist and Best Fanzine 26 1963 was also the second year in which No Award won a category again for Dramatic Presentation 27 In 1964 the guidelines were changed to allow individual conventions to create additional categories which was codified as up to two categories for that year These additional awards were officially designated as Hugo Awards but were not required to be repeated by future conventions 28 This was later adjusted to only allow one additional category while these special Hugo Awards have been given out in several categories only a few were ever awarded for more than one year 8 In 1967 categories for Novelette Fan Writer and Fan Artist were added and a category for Best Novella was added the following year these new categories had the effect of providing a definition for what word count qualified a work for what category which was previously left up to voters 29 30 Novelettes had also been awarded prior to the codification of the rules The fan awards were initially conceived as separate from the Hugo Awards with the award for Best Fanzine losing its status but were instead absorbed into the regular Hugo Awards by the convention committee 23 1970s Edit While traditionally five works had been selected for nomination in each category out of the proposed nominees in 1971 this was set down as a formal rule barring ties 23 In 1973 the WSFS removed the category for Best Professional Magazine and a Best Professional Editor award was instated as its replacement in order to recognize the increasing importance of original anthologies 31 32 After that year the guidelines were changed again to remove the mandated awards and instead allow up to ten categories which would be chosen by each convention though they were expected to be similar to those presented in the year before Despite this change no new awards were added or previous awards removed before the guidelines were changed back to listing specific categories in 1977 23 33 1971 and 1977 both saw No Award win the Dramatic Presentation category for the third and fourth time No Award did not win any categories afterwards until 2015 34 35 1980s and 1990s Edit In 1980 the category for Best Non Fiction Book later renamed Best Related Work was added followed by a category for Best Semiprozine semi professional magazine in 1984 36 37 In 1983 members of the Church of Scientology were encouraged by people such as Charles Platt to nominate as a bloc Battlefield Earth written by the organization s founder L Ron Hubbard for the Best Novel award it did not make the final ballot 38 Another campaign followed in 1987 to nominate Hubbard s Black Genesis it made the final ballot but finished behind No Award 39 1989 saw a work The Guardsman by Todd Hamilton and P J Beese withdrawn by its authors from the final ballot after a fan bought numerous memberships under false names all sent in on the same day in order to get the work onto the ballot 40 In 1990 the Best Original Art Work award was given as a special Hugo Award and was listed again in 1991 though not actually awarded and established afterward as an official Hugo Award 22 41 It was then removed from this status in 1996 and has not been awarded since 42 The Retro Hugos were created in the mid 1990s and were first awarded in 1996 7 Since 2000 Edit Another special Hugo Award for Best Web Site was given twice in 2002 and 2005 but never instated as a permanent category 43 44 In 2003 the Dramatic Presentation award was split into two categories Long Form and Short Form 45 This was repeated with the Best Professional Editor category in 2007 46 2009 saw the addition of the Best Graphic Story category and in 2012 an award for Best Fancast was added 47 48 In 2015 two groups of science fiction writers the Sad Puppies led by Brad R Torgersen and Larry Correia and the Rabid Puppies led by Vox Day each put forward a similar slate of suggested nominations which came to dominate the ballot 49 50 The Sad Puppies campaign had run for two years prior on a smaller scale with limited success The leaders of the campaigns characterized them as a reaction to niche academic overtly leftist nominees and the Hugo becoming an affirmative action award that preferred female and non white authors and characters 49 51 In response five nominees declined their nomination before and for the first time two after the ballot was published 52 53 Multiple Hugo winner Connie Willis declined to present the awards 54 The slates were characterized by The Guardian as a right wing 49 orchestrated backlash 55 and by The A V Club as a group of white guys 56 and were linked with the Gamergate controversy 50 57 58 Multiple Hugo winner Samuel R Delany characterized the campaigns as a response to socio economic changes such as minority authors gaining prominence and thus economic heft 59 In all but the Best Dramatic Presentation Long Form category No Award placed above all nominees that were on either slate and it won all five categories that only contained slate nominees 52 The two campaigns were repeated in 2016 with some changes and the Rabid Puppy slate again dominated the ballot in several categories with all five nominees in Best Related Work Best Graphic Story Best Professional Artist and Best Fancast 60 In response to the campaigns a set of new rules called E Pluribus Hugo were passed in 2015 and ratified in 2016 to modify the nominations process Intended to ensure that organized minority groups cannot dominate every finalist position in a category the new rules define a voting system in which nominees are eliminated one by one with each vote for an eliminated work then spread out over the uneliminated works they nominated until only the final shortlist remains These rules were ratified in 2016 to be used for the first time in 2017 A rule mandating that the final nominees must appear on at least five percent of ballots was also eliminated to ensure that all categories could reach a full set of nominees even when the initial pool of works was very large 61 Each nominator is limited to five works in each category but the final ballot was changed to six in each additionally no more than two works by a given author or group or in the same dramatic series can be in one category on the final ballot 11 In 2018 the newest permanent category Best Series was begun it was run the year prior as a special Hugo Award prior to being ratified at the business meeting 62 Another special Hugo Award for Best Art Book was run in 2019 but not repeated or made a permanent category 63 The 2021 Hugo Awards featured a special Hugo award for video games The Hugo Study Committee is evaluating a proposal for a Best Game or Interactive Experience category which they or others may propose to the 2022 convention 64 65 Categories EditCurrent categories Categories Year started Current descriptionBest Novel 1953 Stories of 40 000 words or moreBest Novella 1968 Stories of between 17 500 and 40 000 wordsBest Novelette 1955 Stories of between 7 500 and 17 500 wordsBest Short Story 1955 Stories of less than 7 500 wordsBest Series 2017 Series of worksBest Related Work 1980 Works which are either non fiction or noteworthy for reasons other than the fictional textBest Graphic Story 2009 Stories told in graphic formBest Dramatic Presentation Long and Short Forms 1958 Dramatized productions divided since 2003 between works longer or shorter than 90 minutesBest Semiprozine 1984 Semi professional magazinesBest Fanzine 1955 Non professional magazinesBest Professional Editor Long and Short Forms 1973 Editors of written works divided since 2007 between editors of novels or editors of magazines and anthologiesBest Professional Artist 1953 Professional artistsBest Fan Artist 1967 Fan artistsBest Fan Writer 1967 Fan writersBest Fancast 2012 Audiovisual fanzinesFormer repeating categories Categories Years active DescriptionBest Professional Magazine 1953 1972 Professional magazinesShort Fiction 1960 1966 Stories of shorter than novel length This category is generally treated as the same award as Best Short Story see winners there but it also included works of novella and novelette length Best Original Art Work 1990 1992 1996 Works of artFormer categories awarded by individual Worldcons Categories Years active DescriptionBest Cover Artist 1953 Artists of covers for books and magazinesBest Interior Illustrator 1953 Artists of works inside magazinesExcellence in Fact Articles 1953 Authors of factual articlesBest New SF Author or Artist 1953 New authors or artists 1 Fan Personality 1953 Favorite fanBest Feature Writer 1956 Writers of magazine featuresBest Book Reviewer 1956 Writers of book reviewsMost Promising New Author 1956 New authorsOutstanding Actifan 1958 Favorite fanBest New Author 1959 New authorsBest SF Book Publisher 1964 1965 Book publishersBest All Time Series 1966 Series of worksOther Forms 1988 Printed fictional works which were not novels novellas novelettes or short storiesBest Web Site 2002 2005 WebsitesBest Art Book 2019 Books of artworkBest Video Game 2021 Video GamesWorldcon committees may also give out special awards during the Hugo ceremony which are not voted on Unlike the additional Hugo categories which Worldcons may present these awards are not officially Hugo Awards and do not use the same trophy though they once did 8 66 Two additional awards the Astounding Award for Best New Writer and the Lodestar Award for Best Young Adult Book are presented at the Hugo Award ceremony and voted on by the same process but are not formally Hugo Awards 62 67 Recognition EditThe Hugo Award is highly regarded by observers The Los Angeles Times has termed it among the highest honors bestowed in science fiction and fantasy writing 68 a claim echoed by Wired who said that it was the premier award in the science fiction genre 1 Justine Larbalestier in The Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction 2002 referred to the awards as the best known and most prestigious of the science fiction awards 69 and Jo Walton writing in An Informal History of the Hugos said it was undoubtedly science fiction s premier award 3 The Guardian similarly acknowledged it as a fine showcase for speculative fiction as well as one of the most venerable democratic and international science fiction awards in existence 70 71 James Gunn in The New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction 1988 echoed The Guardian s statement of the award s democratic nature saying that because of its broad electorate the Hugos were the awards most representative of reader popularity 72 Camille Bacon Smith in Science Fiction Culture 2000 said that at the time fewer than 1000 people voted on the final ballot she held however that this is a representative sample of the readership at large given the number of winning novels that remain in print for decades or become notable outside of the science fiction genre such as The Demolished Man or The Left Hand of Darkness 73 The 2014 awards saw over 1900 nomination submissions and over 3500 voters on the final ballot while the 1964 awards received 274 votes 74 75 76 The 2019 awards saw 1800 nominating ballots and 3097 votes which was described as less than in 2014 2017 but more than any year before then 77 Brian Aldiss in his book Trillion Year Spree The History of Science Fiction claimed that the Hugo Award was a barometer of reader popularity rather than artistic merit he contrasted it with the panel selected Nebula Award which provided more literary judgment though he did note that the winners of the two awards often overlapped 78 Along with the Hugo Award the Nebula Award is also considered one of the premier awards in science fiction with Laura Miller of Salon com terming it science fiction s most prestigious award 79 The official logo of the Hugo Awards is often placed on the winning books cover as a promotional tool 80 81 Gahan Wilson in First World Fantasy Awards 1977 claimed that noting that a book had won the Hugo Award on the cover demonstrably increased sales for that novel 82 though Orson Scott Card said in his 1990 book How to Write Science Fiction amp Fantasy that the award had a larger effect on foreign sales than in the United States 83 Spider Robinson in 1992 claimed that publishers were very interested in authors that won a Hugo Award more so than for other awards such as the Nebula Award 73 Literary agent Richard Curtis said in his 1996 Mastering the Business of Writing that having the term Hugo Award on the cover even as a nominee was a powerful inducement to science fiction fans to buy a novel 84 while Jo Walton claimed in 2011 that the Hugo is the only science fiction award that actually affects sales of a book 3 There have been several anthologies of Hugo winning short fiction The series The Hugo Winners edited by Isaac Asimov was started in 1962 as a collection of short story winners up to the previous year and concluded with the 1982 Hugos in Volume 5 The New Hugo Winners edited originally by Asimov later by Connie Willis and finally by Gregory Benford has four volumes collecting stories from the 1983 to the 1994 Hugos 85 The most recent anthology is The Hugo Award Showcase 2010 edited by Mary Robinette Kowal It contains most of the short stories novelettes and novellas that were nominated for the 2009 award 86 See also EditList of science fiction awards List of joint winners of the Hugo and Nebula awards Nebula Award BSFA Award Locus AwardReferences EditCitations Edit a b c Donahoo Daniel 2010 09 05 Hugo Award Winners Announced at AussieCon 4 Wired Conde Nast Publications Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2011 06 13 Hugo Awards Science Fiction Awards Database Locus Retrieved 2019 11 21 a b c Walton Jo 2018 Introduction An Informal History of the Hugos Tor Books ISBN 978 0 7653 7908 5 Retrieved 2021 09 26 via Tor com Cowdrey Katherine 2018 08 21 Jemisin scoops top Hugo award third time running The Bookseller Retrieved 2019 11 21 Worldcon Report A Great Year for DAW at the 2018 Hugo Awards Penguin Random House Retrieved 2019 11 21 a b c The Locus index to SF Awards About the Hugo Awards Locus Archived from the original on 2010 01 03 Retrieved 2010 04 21 a b c d e f The Hugo Awards FAQ World Science Fiction Society 19 July 2007 Retrieved 2019 03 02 a b c The Hugo Awards Introduction World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 20 The Hugo Awards The Voting System World Science Fiction Society 19 July 2007 Retrieved 2015 06 14 The Hugo Awards Hugo Award Categories World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 20 a b Worldcon 75 2017 Hugo report 2 PDF Worldcon 75 Archived PDF from the original on 2017 08 15 Retrieved 2017 08 15 World Science Fiction Society Worldcon World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2009 04 14 Retrieved 2010 04 20 Madle Inside Science Fiction p 54 a b Nicholls Clute The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction p 595 The Hugo Awards Hugo Award Trophies World Science Fiction Society 19 July 2007 Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2011 06 12 Constitution of the World Science Fiction Society as of August 23 2015 PDF World Science Fiction Society 2015 08 23 Retrieved 2018 09 13 The Locus index to SF Awards About the Retro Hugo Awards Locus Archived from the original on 2010 01 03 Retrieved 2010 04 21 2017 WSFS Minutes PDF World Science Fiction Society 2017 pp 44 45 Retrieved 2018 03 19 1953 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society 26 July 2007 Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 Kyle David ed 1953 Eleventh World Science Convention Program Philadelphia Science Fiction Society p 5 Archived from the original on 2008 12 02 Standlee Kevin 2007 11 03 The Hugo Awards Ask a Question World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2011 06 13 The awards presented in 1953 were initially conceived as one off awards and the 1954 Worldcon decided not to present them again a b Minutes of the Business Meeting 1991 PDF World Science Fiction Society Archived PDF from the original on 2021 07 25 Retrieved 2021 09 26 a b c d e f Franson DeVore A History of the Hugo Nebula and International Fantasy Awards pp 3 6 1959 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 The Con committee Chairman s Guide by George Scithers Chapter 10 The Constitution and Bylaws World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2011 03 03 1961 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 1963 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 The World Science Fiction Society Constitution and Bylaws 1963 World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2011 03 03 1967 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 1968 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 1973 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 Nicholls Clute The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction p 596 Minutes of the Business Meeting at Discon II 1974 PDF World Science Fiction Society Archived PDF from the original on 2021 01 19 Retrieved 2021 09 26 1971 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 1977 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 1980 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 1984 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 Edelman Scott 2015 04 06 In which the Sad Puppies prove to be more powerful than L Ron Hubbard scottedelman com Retrieved 2015 04 27 Wallace Amy 2015 10 30 Sci Fi s Hugo Awards and the Battle for Pop Culture s Soul Wired Conde Nast Archived from the original on 2015 11 17 Retrieved 2015 11 21 Standlee Kevin 2015 04 06 2015 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Retrieved 2015 04 27 Minutes of the Business Meeting 1990 PDF World Science Fiction Society Archived PDF from the original on 2021 09 26 Retrieved 2021 09 26 1996 WSFS Business Meeting Minutes PDF World Science Fiction Society Archived PDF from the original on 2021 09 26 Retrieved 2021 09 26 2002 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society 26 July 2007 Retrieved 2021 04 14 2005 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society 24 July 2007 Retrieved 2021 04 14 2003 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 2007 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 2009 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2011 05 07 Retrieved 2010 04 19 2012 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Archived from the original on 2012 09 04 a b c Flood Alison 2015 04 09 George RR Martin says rightwing lobby has broken Hugo awards The Guardian Retrieved 2015 04 11 a b Waldman Katy 2015 04 08 How Sci Fi s Hugo Awards Got Their Own Full Blown Gamergate Slate Retrieved 2015 04 11 Hugo Award nominations spark criticism over diversity in sci fi Sci fi awards have been roped into a furore The Daily Telegraph 2015 04 08 Archived from the original on April 7 2015 Retrieved 2015 04 12 a b 2015 Hugo Award Statistics PDF World Science Fiction Society 2015 08 22 Retrieved 2015 08 23 Standlee Kevin 2015 04 16 Two Finalists Withdraw from 2015 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society Retrieved 2015 04 19 Hugo Awards Withdrawals Locus 2015 04 15 Retrieved 2015 04 15 Walter Damien 2015 04 06 Are the Hugo nominees really the best sci fi books of the year The Guardian Retrieved 2015 04 11 McCown Alex 2015 04 06 This year s Hugo Award nominees are a messy political controversy The A V Club Retrieved 2015 04 11 Hugo Awards nominations stir controversy The Boston Globe 2015 04 07 Retrieved 2015 04 11 Biggs Tim 2015 04 09 Gamergate style furore after sci fi awards hijacked The Sydney Morning Herald Fairfax Media Retrieved 2015 04 11 Bebergal Peter 2015 07 29 Samuel Delany and the Past and Future of Science Fiction The New Yorker Advance Publications Archived from the original on 2015 08 01 Retrieved 2015 08 03 Glyer Mike 2016 04 26 Measuring The Rabid Puppies Slate s Impact on the Final Hugo Ballot Retrieved 2016 09 11 Business Passed On World Science Fiction Society Annual Business Meeting MidAmeriCon II Archived from the original on 2017 02 24 Retrieved 2017 02 24 a b 2018 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society 15 March 2018 Retrieved 2018 04 02 2019 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society 28 July 2019 Retrieved 2021 04 14 Bonifacic Igor 2020 11 23 The Hugo Awards will have a video game category in 2021 Engadget Retrieved 2020 11 24 2021 Hugo Awards World Science Fiction Society January 2021 Retrieved 2021 04 14 Franson DeVore A History of the Hugo Nebula and International Fantasy Awards p 7 The Hugo Awards Campbell Awards World Science Fiction Society 9 August 2007 Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2011 06 13 Kellogg Carolyn 2011 04 25 2011 Hugo Award nominees announced Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2011 06 13 Larbalestier The Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction p 255 Jordison Sam 2008 08 07 An International Contest We Can Win The Guardian Archived from the original on 2009 07 29 Retrieved 2010 04 21 Jordison Sam 2008 08 07 Why do critics still sneer at sci fi The Guardian Archived from the original on 2009 07 30 Retrieved 2011 06 13 Gunn The New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction p 32 a b Bacon Smith Science Fiction Culture p 61 Standlee Kevin 2014 04 19 2014 Hugo Awards Finalists Announced World Science Fiction Society Retrieved 2015 04 07 Ellis Petersen Hannah 2014 08 17 Ann Leckie s debut novel wins Hugo science fiction award The Guardian Retrieved 2014 08 18 1964 Hugo Statistics PDF World Science Fiction Society Retrieved 2014 04 26 2019 Hugo Results PDF World Science Fiction Society 2019 08 19 Retrieved 2019 08 20 Aldiss Wingrove Trillion Year Spree p 349 Miller Laura 2011 08 20 The Death of the Red Hot Center Salon com Archived from the original on 2011 01 29 Retrieved 2011 09 20 The Hugo Awards Hugo Awards Logo Contest Official Rules World Science Fiction Society 7 April 2009 Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2010 04 21 Scalzi John 2010 01 05 Your Hate Mail Will Be Graded Out in Trade Paperback scalzi com Archived from the original on 2011 07 09 Retrieved 2010 04 21 Gahan First World Fantasy Awards 17 Card How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy p 133 Curtis Mastering the Business of Writing ch 15 Barron Anatomy of Wonder p 476 The Hugo Award Showcase Editorial Review Publishers Weekly Sources Edit Aldiss Brian Wingrove David 1988 1973 Trillion Year Spree The History of Science Fiction Paladin ISBN 0 586 08684 6 Bacon Smith Camille 2000 Science Fiction Culture University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0 8122 1530 3 Barron Neil 2004 Anatomy of Wonder A Critical Guide to Science Fiction 5th ed Libraries Unlimited ISBN 1 59158 171 0 Card Orson Scott 1990 07 15 How to Write Science Fiction and Fantasy Writer s Digest Books ISBN 0 89879 416 1 Curtis Richard 1996 15 Mastering the Business of Writing Allworth Press ISBN 1 880559 55 2 Franson Donald DeVore Howard 1978 A History of the Hugo Nebula and International Fantasy Awards Misfit Press Gunn James ed 1988 The New Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Viking Press ISBN 0 670 81041 X Larbalestier Justine 2002 The Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction Wesleyan University Press ISBN 0 8195 6527 X Madle Robert A March 1954 Inside Science Fiction Future Science Fiction 4 6 Nicholls Peter Clute John 1993 The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction St Martin s Press ISBN 0 312 09618 6 The Hugo Award Showcase Editorial Review Publishers Weekly 257 35 2010 09 06 ISSN 0000 0019 Walton Jo 2018 An Informal History of the Hugos Tor Books ISBN 978 0 7653 7908 5 Wilson Gahan ed 1977 First World Fantasy Awards Doubleday ISBN 0 385 12199 7 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hugo Award Official website Current rules including Constitution of the WSFS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hugo Award amp oldid 1112736028, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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