So a lot of conversation is going on at the moment, post-Worldcon, about just how weird the demographics were, and that leads to “I’m tired of all this ageism” and while I am arguably not the most interesting or insightful on that matter, nor do I have a lot of experience with Worldcons, but hey, it’s the Internet, and when did that ever stop
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(1) I want to say it wasn't like that!
(2) I realize that I went out of my way to try and catch two things: the inclusive panels (there was a list of them put out by I believe coffeeandink) and the ones featuring specific people who also happened (I say that with self-suspicion) to be older white women. And there was still some, uhm, some really creepy stuff.
(3) I am remembering how old how many people I talked to were, relative to me. Most of them were not younger. I think possibly a couple of the people I saw from the art show and the dealer's room. Literally, two.
(4) I think part of it is that I geek relatively heavily on old SF, so I am capable of having a discussion that is more "You read 'Evening Primrose' too? I thought I was the only one!" than it is "Well I have read Jack Vance and Alfred Bester so neener."
(5) ...it was so like that, wasn't it. Dammit.
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Last time I got this, I actually knew the obscure thing in question, and quieted the room when I said: "I meant someone who did it well." They didn't like me, but damn was I tickled pink because that's one of my biggest pet peeves.* As a reader, if someone goes "Wouldn't it be cool if someone wrote XYZ?" I can bounce and go "yes! There's a thing, I can show you!" For some reason, a lot of SF people use it as a way to shut down conversation rather than draw the conversation out and I just don't get it. Like, you're here as a fan to discuss the things you love, wouldn't you want to... discuss? What exactly are you here for ( ... )
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"Is there only room for one story in any given idea?" (Anybody who believes so should be referred to The Giftie Gie Us by Timothy Zahn, a story which he sent in to a magazine, only to discover that somebody had written a story with the same major plot point, and it was published that month in the magazine to which he had submitted.)
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The remarkable part, however, isn't the 'alien parasites' bit, but the names of the characters. Sturgeon's story was about a couple, Derek and Vera, and Asimov's story was also about a couple, Drake and Vera. [Vera had her name changed in the public version. Partly to make the stories more distinct, partly because a woman called Vera worked at the publishing company and it was thought that TWO stories about her being infected by alien parasites in one year might just creep her out a little too much]
There seems to be a long tradition in golden age SF of two or more authors simultaneously submitting very similar stories.
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(Incidentally, I haven't read most of the later Heinlein stuff myself. Sneer at me about it and I'll sneer right back, and maybe get snobby about more-modern authors that I've read. It works a treat -- they're so surprised that I don't cringe in shame that I can make my getaway while they're still sputtering.)
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I think at smaller conventions it's much easier to argue back with a panel. At a Worldcon panels and panelists acquire a gravitas they do not deserve. Something to muse on and try to change.
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