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Censorship China Sci-Fi The 2000 Beanies

Leaked Emails Show Hugo Awards Self-Censoring To Appease China (404media.co) 89

samleecole shares a report from 404 Media: A trove of leaked emails shows how administrators of one of the most prestigious awards in science fiction censored themselves because the awards ceremony was being held in China. Earlier this month, the Hugo Awards came under fire with accusations of censorship when several authors were excluded from the awards, including Neil Gaiman, R. F. Kuang, Xiran Jay Zhao, and Paul Weimer. These authors' works had earned enough votes to make them finalists, but were deemed "ineligible" for reasons not disclosed by Hugo administrators. The Hugo Awards are one of the largest and most important science fiction awards. [...]

The emails, which show the process of compiling spreadsheets of the top 10 works in each category and checking them for "sensitive political nature" to see if they were "an issue in China," were obtained by fan writer Chris M. Barkley and author Jason Sanford, and published on fandom news site File 770 and Sanford's Patreon, where they uploaded the full PDF of the emails. They were provided to them by Hugo Awards administrator Diane Lacey. Lacey confirmed in an email to 404 Media that she was the source of the emails. "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," Dave McCarty, head of the 2023 awards jury, directed administrators in an email. "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 of if the law will require us to make an administrative decision about it."

The email replies to this directive show administrators combing through authors' social media presences and public travel histories, including from before they were nominated for the 2023 awards, and their writing and bodies of work beyond just what they were nominated for. Among dozens of other posts and writings, they note Weimer's negative comments about the Chinese government in a Patreon post and misspell Zhao's name and work (calling their novel Iron Widow "The Iron Giant"). About author Naseem Jamnia, an administrator allegedly wrote, "Author openly describes themselves as queer, nonbinary, trans, (And again, good for them), and frequently writes about gender, particularly non-binary. The cited work also relies on these themes. I include them because I don't know how that will play in China. (I suspect less than well.)"

"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 Hugo Award admins which had the effect of being the proxies Chinese government," Sanford and Barkley wrote. In conjunction with the email trove, Sanford and Barkley also released an apology letter from Lacey, in which she explains some of her role in the awards vetting process and also blames McCarty for his role in the debacle. McCarty, along with board chair Kevin Standlee, resigned earlier this month.

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Leaked Emails Show Hugo Awards Self-Censoring To Appease China

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  • This all sounds very 1990's.

    We don't really need opinion gatekeepers anymore.

    • by test321 ( 8891681 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @10:11PM (#64243674)

      You never needed opinion gatekeepers, they just happen to be very helpful if you value your limited reading time. More works are published than you can read, and not all of them are worth your eye blinks and brain cycles.

      • Yes, but now we can get opinions from other fans for free over the internet instead of depending on organizations.

        • by skam240 ( 789197 )

          Yes, but now we can get opinions from other fans for free over the internet instead of depending on organizations.

          So I can find out from Buttsniffer00769 that he thinks some book "slaps"? No thanks. The people at Hugo responsible for this are gone and hopefully this means they've got their shit back together. Filtering the general publics views through Hugos paid gate for voting acts as enough of a filter to make their judgements more reliable in my eyes than simply aggregating general public opinion as it leaves the voting largely in the hands of adult enthusiasts who have their lives together enough to put together t

      • You never needed opinion gatekeepers, they just happen to be very helpful if you value your limited reading time.

        Not really. Critics have always sucked, and have always reviewed works according to their personal tastes and biases. This goes for books critics, art critics, film critics, you name it.

        The best books move according to the way they always have: word of mouth. If something is really good, eventually, enough people notice it to say so, loudly, and other people start reading the works. There are no end of writers, musicians, artists, etc, that were shunned by "experts", and broke through because admirers sprea

  • Why go to China? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by evanh ( 627108 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @08:33PM (#64243578)

    Obviously they knew what controls they were implementing. And that they were being politically biased in the selection process.

    It begs the question of why do it in China at all? It's not like the awards needed to be in a particular location to be effective. Was there extra funding than usual? If so, who benefited the most? Or was it all just a stunt to create a news piece?

    • Re:Why go to China? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:00PM (#64243606) Homepage

      Worldcon. The Hugos are presented as part of Worldcon... which was in China last year.

      • by flink ( 18449 )

        You could not though. If the board feels that worldcon has chosen a politically repressive venue antithetical to the values of the SF community it could present them elsewhere in protest.

        • "You could not though."

          No, not really. The Hugos are an integral part of worldcon. The "board" you are talking about is the same worldcon board that chose China in the first place.

        • Re:Why go to China? (Score:4, Interesting)

          by Geoffrey.landis ( 926948 ) on Friday February 16, 2024 @11:27AM (#64244766) Homepage

          If the board feels that worldcon has chosen a politically repressive venue antithetical to the values of the SF community it could present them elsewhere in protest.

          Unfortunately, the worldcon rules are unambiguous that the convention committee hosting the Worldcon runs the Hugos. There is no "board" that can decide to present them elsewhere.

          The rules were obviously written without expecting this case.

          This is a very big deal in the SF world, and a lot of people are talking about what to do to prevent this recurring. We can expect that there will be some serious proposals for rules changes at the next business meeting, which is the next Worldcon (in Scotland). In the meantime, the Glasgow worldcon has issued a statement about how they wil: ensure transparency: https://glasgow2024.org/chairs... [glasgow2024.org]

    • Re:Why go to China? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by The Faywood Assassin ( 542375 ) <benyjr@@@yahoo...ca> on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:02PM (#64243610) Homepage

      I had the same question. Where next? Russia? Saudi Arabia?

      For an award that recognizes imaginative writing, why hold them in countries that punish free speech?

      • Re:Why go to China? (Score:5, Interesting)

        by cirby ( 2599 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:16PM (#64243624)

        It's all about the rules of Worldcon.

        It moves around, based on the votes of the attendees.

        China put enough votes together (by buying a lot of memberships) to get it in China. It all went downhill from there.

        It would take a major change in the rules to make this impossible in the future. And yes, your two nasty examples are technically in the running (in theory).

        • So Worldcon is the next NAZI bar I guess. Just like PGA is the Bonesaw Golf League.

          The rules may allow it...but rules can be changed and you can simply refund the memberships and tell them to pound sand.

          A writing celebration that tolerates *censorship* is kinda the stuff of, ahem, fiction?
          • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

            So Worldcon is the next NAZI bar I guess. Just like PGA is the Bonesaw Golf League.

            The rules may allow it...but rules can be changed and you can simply refund the memberships and tell them to pound sand.

            A writing celebration that tolerates *censorship* is kinda the stuff of, ahem, fiction?

            Well, how about the situation of "no one expected it"?

            The rules say the voters pick the next location. They picked China. This suddenly brings up a lot of concerns.

            Unfortunately, you can't retroactively go and say "we're d

            • Lots of words. Lots of irrelevant strawman arguments.

              simple answer, restrict to places that actually respect and enforce freedom of expression. It's not a hard thing. Or become the NAZI bar.
        • That's a pretty poor excuse as they could just deem certain countries ineligible for human rights issues.
          • Who could "just deem certain countries ineligible for human rights issues"? Who decides, and on what criteria?

            I guarantee that if you invent the power to define countries ineligible "for human rights issues," some people will try to ban Worldcons in, for example, the United States.

    • Now I want to know what works were censored.
      • by hawk ( 1151 )

        indeed.

        A story that would offend the CCP already has something going for it . . .

        hawk, now smiling at the notion of Pournelle or Heinlein getting nominated at a convention there . . .

  • I hadn't been following this story. Can someone fill me in on why they were holding their event in China in the first place?

    • by UnknownSoldier ( 67820 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:02PM (#64243608)

      Why does anyone doe business with China?

      Money.

      • Not necessarily. Some do business with China because they were non-discriminatory in how they applied their rules, and then countries like China either game the system, or come out ahead because of their sheer population size. That's what happened in this case. Worldcon and the Hugos go where the votes are, China got the most votes, there were no rules baring it behing held in China. Nothing more, nothing less. There was no additional money to be made by going to China and it wasn't Worldcon's decision to g

      • by dapic ( 527891 )

        Why does anybody do business with ANYBODY?

    • by whitroth ( 9367 )

      Because Chinese fans, who had bid to hold the Worldcon - and there are a *lot* of them - won the vote, held at the Worldcon two years in advance.

      • by skam240 ( 789197 )

        Thanks for the answer as I was wondering as well.

        Seems like they need new rules about limiting country choices to those that will not impose limitations on what can be voted on then.

    • Fu Manchu created an amazing secret tunnel through the core of the Earth and stole the contest from where it is usually held (probably a cheap lot just outside Hollywood, or a warehouse near London).

  • by EmoryM ( 2726097 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @08:46PM (#64243586)
    I remember the puppies being sad because of GamerGate, now they've got to deal with the Yulin Dog Meat Festival...
    • I remember the dishonesty being demonstrated then, the publisher block voting etc making a mockery of the awards. I remember the personal attacks and invective meant to cover that up.
      Why did the Hugo's have any shred of credibility to lose, exactly? We've known this is who they are for years.
  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @08:52PM (#64243596)

    Judging by a small sample of the first few pages of the emails at the level of details just these award administrators ( award administrators!) went through in these authors' lives (both recent and past stuff), I can only imagine the level of details the 3-letter agencies go through with everyone else's pasts.

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:00PM (#64243604)

    Because this sort of crap pretty much is fundamentally incompatible with "prestigious".

  • Phht sure. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:04PM (#64243612) Journal

    Next you're going to say that they're manipulating the award process to virtue signal.

    Obviously, THAT's unpossible.

  • The year is 1985. Richard Nixon is serving his fourth non-consecutive term in office. And the autuer director John Milius's critically-acclaimed box-office hit Red Dawn is widely assumed to be up for Best Picture award. Except that this year, in a bid to get some of them juicy roubles, the Oscars are being held in Leningrad...

  • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:15PM (#64243622) Homepage Journal

    To just NOT hold the ceremony in a place unfriendly to the ideals of Sci-Fi and the award rather than destroying the award itself?

    Who is going to lend any credence to a Hugo award now?

    • To just NOT hold the ceremony in a place unfriendly to the ideals of Sci-Fi and the award rather than destroying the award itself?

      And where would that be? China has a huge Sci-Fi fan base. Worldcon and the Hugos go where the Sci-Fi fans, specifically members of the World Science Fiction Society, vote it to go. The fact of the matter is a majority of the fans previously selected they wanted it to be in China next.

      Does that sounds like a Sci-Fi unfriendly place to you, the place with the most fans? And before you talk about dictators, democracy, and censorship, there is more Sci-Fi out there that deals with those kinds of dystopias than

      • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Friday February 16, 2024 @09:33AM (#64244506) Homepage Journal

        Considering that they destroyed the integrity of the award, the price of China was too high.

        The Sci-Fi that deals in dystopias do not ADVOCATE for those dystopias. There are way too many story lines in Sci-Fi where someone makes too many concessions to dystopia and so becomes part of it's driving force.

        • Considering that they destroyed the integrity of the award, the price of China was too high.

          Again there was no choice. The Worldcon constitution does not discriminate by country, policy or in any way other than to make sure the next Worldcon is at least 500miles away from the previous one. Chinese people voted for it to be in China, because they have a huge SciFi community. That doesn't make them SciFi unfriendly.

          The fact that the integrity of the award was breached to comply with local laws doesn't make the country SciFi unfriendly - to be clear, SciFi books won the award, and none of the authors

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            The Chinese PEOPLE are not unfriendly to Sci-Fi. The Chinese government certainly IS.

            Unless you can tell me that the administrators of the awards had someone kick in their doors, put a bag over their heads, and throw them in the trunk, there WAS a choice. They managed to ignore their own criteria for choosing the winners, are you telling me they were bound by physical law to ignore only that?

            Other options might have included simply not announcing the more locally controversial winners until later. Or announ

    • by Teun ( 17872 )

      Who is going to lend any credence to a Hugo award now?

      Winnie The Pooh

  • by Revek ( 133289 ) on Thursday February 15, 2024 @09:22PM (#64243628)
    The people running the Hugo's are a bunch of weak little weeds blowing in whatever direction their current political and social wind blows. They set a standard that has nothing to do with the competency and quality of the authors. They have repeatedly over the years censored good authors for a host of reasons including their race although they wouldn't admit that. Instead they come up with other excuses. So its no surprise that its political views they deemed unpopular by a dictatorship this year. I quit paying any attention to them a decade back.
    • I doubt it, they probably had handlers in China giving them honest or dishonest sob stories how the lives of them and Chinese readers would be impacted if the CCP looked negatively on worldcon.

      As for social censorship, I don't recall non eligiblility coming up. The attendees voted to not give an award.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The people running the Hugo's are a bunch of weak little weeds blowing in whatever direction their current political and social wind blows.

      The "people running the Hugos" are the convention committee of whatever fan group has won the bid to host the worldcon (or the group of administrators appointed by that group.)

      They set a standard that has nothing to do with the competency and quality of the authors.

      Neither true nor untrue. The "standard" is that the awards go to the authors that the fans who attend worldcons like. Each person voting has the ability to decide what they consider "the competency and quality" of the works. Yes, there are people out there who think that the works fans vote for is more a popularity contest than a cons

    • Spot on. Most big, well-known, awards are like this. Once a committee gets involved it's pretty much over, and virtue signaling takes the prize. I trust independent reviewers much more. The racial stuff is way-past-old, too, I'm sooo done with race and gender bullshit partisan politics invading my fiction-space. When will they learn they cannot "enlighten" people by trying to ram inferior books down their throats.
  • If this is true, it is absolutely disgusting. Maybe they should have two lists: Hugo Award winners, and best SF author. As it is, a Hugo Award for 2023 means nothing.

    What would be an absolute coup for the Chinese government: Go public with this, tell the world that they never demanded any censoring but that it is all the result of decadent westerners self-censoring (and that might even be true) and publish all authors together with the number of votes they received.
    • What would be an absolute coup for the Chinese government: Go public with this, tell the world that they never demanded any censoring

      You are saying they should lie? What would be a coup about that? We expect them to lie.

      • Please read more carefully. There is plenty of evidence that the Hugo award committees censored people. There is little evidence that China asked for it. There is a distinct possibility that we have a group of deluded cowards who censored themselves because they believed it was expected.
        • There is plenty of evidence that the Hugo award committees censored people. There is little evidence that China asked for it. There is a distinct possibility that we have a group of deluded cowards who censored themselves because they believed it was expected.

          It is China. That is was expected is a given.

    • Except in a dictatorship the people you interact with as a foreigner are infested with secret police. China making no written demands is meaningless, it's an influence game. They will know what's expected without demand and it does come from government.

  • an article about censorship behind a paywall
  • China. This is a country that placed a ban on Winnie the Pooh because one of their politicians got butthurt over being compared to a British children's fiction. As well as uncountable other bans, thefts, human disappearances, and who-knows-what under a power (large and small, city and street level,) that run on threats, not laws. This isn't about needing a massive anti-crime campaign, China needs to stop taking itself so seriously. On both sides of this is must be remembered that if you're dealing with fore
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      China needs to stop taking itself so seriously.

      Sure China just needs dramatically change their culture and systems of social organization so they can get a long with the rest of us.

      I totally agree, I also recognize, the only way it happens is isolation and defeat. As long as the world continues to engage China on China's terms they see it as vindication of their (to us) anti-social behavior. China is a never going to embrace a less top down, more small-L-liberalization of thought until the rest of us disengage.

      They *might* stay the course on more open

  • They went to China for money, and corrupted their purpose to make it happen. Simple as that. Same old whoring.
    • Money is not involved in the selection of where to host the Hugos, and indeed the Hugos nor Worldcon have any say in the matter. It is voted for by members.

      If money was involved it was because China *spent* money, not because anyone else stood to gain any.

  • Kowtowing to an authoritarian, repressive system hellbent on censorship, controlling the narrative, and telling everyone else how to live their lives must be ignored, resisted, and prevented at every opportunity.
    • Alphabet agencies working with social media companies to engage in mass censorship on everything from Hunter's laptop to covid. And it's not China trying to send a journalist to prison for nearly two centuries for revealing its war crimes.

  • In other words, the winners may not have won if the contest was fair and not politically tainted.

  • by alanw ( 1822 ) <alan@wylie.me.uk> on Friday February 16, 2024 @08:41AM (#64244362) Homepage

    https://www.antipope.org/charl... [antipope.org]

    You've probably seen news reports that the Hugo awards handed out last year at the world science fiction convention in Chengdu were rigged. For example: Science fiction awards held in China under fire for excluding authors.

    The Guardian got bits of the background wrong, but what's undeniably true is that it's a huge mess. And the key point the press and most of the public miss is that they seem to think there's some sort of worldcon organization that can fix this.

    Spoiler: there isn't.

  • I think I speak for everyone here when I say it is clear that this McCarty (wtf a McCarty opposing free speech FOR communists?! is life weird or what man?) at the very least should be detained and investigated; if he is acting as an agent of China (imho this is reflexively obvious but we need the appearance of law to justify our high-mindedness), he should be executed and deported.

  • by denny_deluxe ( 1693548 ) on Friday February 16, 2024 @01:49PM (#64245358)
    When you drop down to your knees to fellate the Chinese government, this is what you get. I don't know why these clowns thought this would end any differently.

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