From the President


SFRA Review, vol. 54 no. 1

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the President

Hugh O’Connell

I want to use my column this issue to talk about some ways to get more involved with the SFRA. We have a number of positions at the organizational level—appointed and elected, immediate and forthcoming—that we are looking to fill. Coming up for immediate appointment are the positions of Web Director and Outreach Officer (information about each position below). A little further down the line, we’ll be sending out official calls for candidates to run for the elected Executive Committee positions of Vice President and of Treasurer. The SFRA is an entirely unpaid volunteer run organization, and we are dependent on our members’ enthusiasm and generosity with their time and skills to keep the wheels turning. So, if you are someone that is looking to get more involved in running and shaping the organization (or you know someone that might be), please take some time to look over and share the various call for volunteers below.

Positions for Immediate Appointment

SFRA Web Director (unpaid volunteer, appointed position)
The web director position is particularly pressing as our current web director is unfortunately moving on from the position imminently. Here is how the SFRA bylaws describe the role of the web director:

The office of the web director shall be responsible for the maintenance of the SFRA website. The web director will report to the Executive Committee and will update the contents and format of the website as deemed appropriate by the Executive Committee. The web director will be appointed by the Executive Committee, and will serve an open-ended term, which can be terminated by either the web director or the Executive Committee. The web director shall not be a member of the Executive Committee.

Our current web director provided this list of the usual tasks performed by the position:

  • Assisting users with any technical issues relating to logins and memberships
  • Uploading any new or updated content for the website
  • Updating the expiration dates on the membership at the end of each year
  • Adding new pages and memberships each year for the annual SFRA conference
  • Implementing a voting system (for example, using MailPoet) for any SFRA membership votes
  • Keeping site plugins and the WordPress version up-to-date

SFRA Outreach Officer (unpaid volunteer, appointed position)

The second position of outreach officer has remained unfulfilled since its creation. Here is how the bylaws describe the outreach officer:

The outreach officer will organize, in coordination with the vice president, the various internet and social media outlets, in order to publicize and further the goals and mission of the organization. They will also be responsible for seeking opportunities for collaboration and outreach with other scholarly organizations, especially organizations that serve populations that have historically been underrepresented in SFRA. The outreach officer will be appointed by the Executive Committee and will serve a three-year term, which can be terminated by either the outreach officer or the Executive Committee. The outreach officer shall not be a member of the Executive Committee.

If you have questions about either position, please, reach out—and we would love to see your application. Working with the SFRA has been one of the highlights of my academic career. The sense of camaraderie and openness is highly rewarding. If you are interested in serving as the next web director or the outreach officer for the organization, please send a (short!) letter of interest and a CV to hugh.oconnell@umb.edu.


Statements by SFRA 2022 Award Winners and Committee Chairs


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 4

From the SFRA Executive Committee


Statements by SFRA 2022 Award Winners and Committee Chairs

The SFRA Board

SFRA Awards Presented at the “Disruptive Imaginaries” 2023 Conference at TU-Dresden

Student Paper Award
The Student Paper Award is presented to the outstanding scholarly essay read at the annual conference of the SFRA by a student.


The winner of the 2021 award is Josie Holland for their paper “Constructing Radical Queer Futures and Deconstructing Noir Fiction in The Penumbra Podcast.”

Mary Kay Bray Award
The Mary Kay Bray Award is given for the best review to appear in the SFRA Review in a given year.

This year’s awardee is Dennis Wilson Wise for his “Review of Hidden Wyndham: Life, Love, Letters” (SFRA Review 52.1)

The selection committee also awarded an honorable mention to Jeremy Brett for his “Review of WandaVision” (SFRA Review 52.1).

SFRA Book Award
The SFRA Book Award is given to the author of the best first scholarly monograph in SF, in each calendar year.

This year’s winner is Emily Midkiff for Equipping Space Cadets: Primary Science Fiction for Young Children.

The selection committee also awarded an honorable mention to Anne Stewart for Angry Planet: Decolonial Fiction and the American Third World

Thomas D. Clareson Award
The Thomas D. Clareson Award for Distinguished Service is presented for outstanding service activities-promotion of SF teaching and study, editing, reviewing, editorial writing, publishing, organizing meetings, mentoring, and leadership in SF/fantasy organizations.

This year’s awardee is Shelley S. Streeby (Professor in the Departments of Ethnic Studies and Literature at the University of California, San Diego).

SFRA Innovative Research Award
The SFRA Innovative Research Award (formerly the Pioneer Award) is given to the writer or writers of the best critical essay-length work of the year.

This year’s awardee is Paweł Frelik for his essay ““Power Games: Towards the Rhetoric of Energy in Speculative Video Games,” from Er(r)go. Teoria – Literatura – Kultura, 44 (2022). The selection committee also awarded an honorable mention to Nora Castle for her essay “In Vitro Meat: Contemporary Narratives of Cultured Flesh,” from Extrapolation 63.2 (2022).

SFRA Award for Lifetime Contributions to SF Scholarship
Originally the Pilgrim Award, the SFRA Award for Lifetime Contributions to SF Scholarship was created in 1970 by the SFRA to honor lifetime contributions to SF and fantasy scholarship. The award was first named for J. O. Bailey’s pioneering book, Pilgrims through Space and Time, and altered in 2019.

This year’s awardee is Steven Shaviro (DeRoy Professor of English Wayne State University Department of English)

AWARD COMMITTEE STATEMENTS

Student Paper Award, outgoing chair: Josh Pearson

Out of this year’s strong field, the committee has selected Josie Holland’s “Constructing Radical Queer Futures and Deconstructing Noir Fiction in The Penumbra Podcast” as the winner.  The paper offered a sophisticated fusion of theoretical approaches, delivered through an engaging and accessible argument.  We were excited by the paper’s engagement with the Podcast medium, an increasingly important venue for SF worldbuilding.  The paper brings together both the genre conventions and the critical discussions of Noir and SF in order to map a vision of queer futurity “where queerness is everywhere and therefore, nowhere,” clearly represented but also “so universalized that it disappears from the daily language” of narrative world.  We congratulate Holland on this excellent piece and look forward to seeing more of their scholarship in the future.

Mary Kay Bray Award, outgoing chair: Rich Horton

The Mary Kay Bray Award committee has chose Dennis Wilson Wise’s review of Hidden Wyndham: Life, Love, Letters (by Amy Binns) as the recipient of the Mary Kay Bray Award for 2023. We were impressed by the well-written and thorough review, which intelligently describes the content of the book, in the context of deep knowledge of the book’s subject; and which also smartly engages with Hidden Wyndham‘s potentially contestable claims, and with its literary conclusions. The review introduced us to a worthwhile work, and on its own enhanced our understanding of an important and somewhat less-remembered SF writer, while whetting our appetite for further investigation.

Among many other impressive contributions to the SFRA Review in 2023, we were also impressed by Jeremy Brett’s review of the limited series WandaVision, which gave us insight and new ideas about a fine television production, which we want to recognize with an Honorable Mention.”

Book Award, outgoing chair: Keren Omry

I’m super excited to present the 2022 SFRA Book Award. This award seeks out game-changing monographs by new scholars or those new to the field which means that as the committee chair, I’ve had the opportunity to read hundreds of books over the past four years. As you can imagine this has been an unbelievable intellectual experience and for those of you (us) still struggling to churn out your first SFS book, I’m here to say, don’t lose heart, at least four people will read it!

After four years chairing this award committee I will be stepping down but before I do I want to express my warmest appreciation of my fellow committee members: Joan Gordon, Chris Pak, and Dan Hassler-Forrest who managed to make a daunting project both efficient and good fun.

We had a surprisingly sparse turn out this year which on reflection, I think is at least partly the natural impact of COVID 2020. Happily, the quality of the scholarship did not drop one iota. I want to begin with an honorable mention for Angry Planet: Decolonial Fiction and the American Third World (U of Minnesota Press) by Anne Stewart, which came at a very close second.

Stewart’s richly layered analysis of the ways in which sf can portray our natural environment not as a passive space but as an active, even vengeful agent in our stories and imaginations is a necessary and timely intervention in the field. Her writing is perceptive, nuanced, and impassioned, while the variety of diverse sources do important work that helps further shift sf studies’ traditional focus on sf as a colonizer genre into welcome new territory. Congratulations!

With no further ado, on behalf of the committee, I want to announce that the winner of the 2022 SFRA Book Award is Emily Midkiff, for her Equipping Space Cadets: Primary Science Fiction for Young Children (UP of Mississippi)

Midkiff’s book offers a comprehensively research entry point into an under-discussed and under-researched aspect of science fiction. As a field of academic inquiry, sf studies has been so preoccupied with distancing itself from the childishness so commonly attributed to the genre that the vast and hugely important topic of children’s sf. Her book not only provides a compelling reinvigoration of this hugely important field of cultural production; it’s also a lot of fun to read.

Thomas D. Clareson Award for Distinguished Service, outgoing chair: Rebekah Sheldon

The Thomas D. Clareson Award for Distinguished Service recognizes excellence in science-fiction teaching, editing, reviewing, editorial writing, publishing, organizing meetings, mentoring, and leadership in sf organizations. This year the committee recognizes Shelley Streeby for her advocacy of historically excluded and marginalized writers and her leadership in bringing together science fiction, public policy in the sciences, and social justice activism. Through her collaborative public-facing projects and in her work as a mentor and teacher, Dr. Streeby has been unstinting in her commitment to fostering diverse communities of science fiction writers and critics toward a more sustainable and joyful future for everyone.

Shelley Streeby is Professor of Literature and Ethnic Studies at University of California San Diego and the author of three monographs and two edited collections in the field of Popular Culture Studies. From 2010-2021, she served as Director of the Clarion Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Workshop where she helped to foster important new voices in science fiction and fantasy writing including Tamsyn Muir, Carmen Maria Machado, and Jordy Rosenberg, among others.

Shelley’s leadership role at the Arthur C. Clarke Center for Human Imagination at UCSD has helped to transform the Center into an invaluable institution at UCSD and in the broader San Diego community. One of a very few such research centers in the country, the Clarke Center supports innovative interdisciplinary projects that use speculation to imagine more just collective futures, bringing the techniques of science fictional extrapolation to work in the sciences and the sciences to humanistic inquiry. As a board member, she has hosted numerous SF luminaries, including Ted Chiang, Jeff VanderMeer, George R.R. Martin, and Alex Rivera.

In addition to her Directorship of the Clarion, Shelley Streeby was instrumental in establishing the UC Speculative Futures Collective from 2019 through 2021, supported by co-PIs Neda Atanasoski, Christopher T. Fan, and Nalo Hopkinson. A major initiative funded by a UC Multicampus Research grant, the collective brought together activists, scholars and graduate students from across the UC-system and the state of California for a series of symposia to think together about how to confront the legacies of imperialism, racism, and colonialism as they impact sex, gender, education, and ecology through the technique of “speculation from below.” Through Shelley’s leadership, dozens of research projects were funded through the grant, leaving a major impact not only on intellectual life in the UC system, but throughout the region.

One such project was San Diego 2049, a conference in which engineers, scientists, SF writers and theorists worked together to produce speculative designs for San Diego’s future and to “cancel dystopia,” as speaker and SF writer Annalee Newitz put it in a discussion Newitz and Streeby continued at the 2019 San Diego Comic-Con.

Shelley Streeby’s own work on speculative futures is strongly oriented to the past and to questions around collective memory, archival practices, and historiography, a combination she names “Histo-Futurism” from her study of the Octavia Butler archive at the Huntington Library. In a series of essays and in her current book project, Dr. Streeby considers how Octavia Butler’s auto-archival scrap book projects are a kind of speculative world building and transformative time travel. In Streeby’s generative reading, Butler’s archival practices constellate current events into critical apparatuses for confronting the real conditions of the present and for envisioning utopias of the future. In Streeby’s reading of Butler, the public library, the archive, and the scrapbook become portals to other worlds.

Through the Clarke Center, Dr. Streeby collaborated with Ayana Jamieson, the founder of the Octavia Butler Legacy Network, on 2016’s Shaping Change conference, which included writers like Nisi Shawl, Walidah Imarisha, and Ted Chiang as well as scholars-activists such as Rasheeda Philips, andrienne marie brown, and Moya Bailey in the project of histo-futurist interpretation. She was also a co-organizer of the 2017 Octavia E. Butler Studies convergence. Her current book project, Speculative Feminist Environmentalisms: Hidden Histories and Ecologies of Science Fiction World-Making promises a transformative reading of feminist SF ecological imaginaries in the works of Ursula Le Guin, Judith Merrill, and Octavia E. Butler. This continues the project of her most recent book, Imagining the Futures of Climate Change: World-Making Through Science Fiction and Activism (University of California Press 2018) which Conrad Scott in Science Fiction Studies called “an indispensable text in working to turn the dystopian now toward more positive and inclusive means of fostering world community-building.”

In addition to these projects in SF Studies, Streeby has been an important voice in working class studies and comic studies. Her first two books, American Sensations: Class, Empire, And the Production of Popular Culture (University of California Press in 2007)and Radical Sensations: World Movements, Violence, And Visual Culture (Duke University Press in 2013) reconsider how sensation literature reflected the importance of imperialism in the popular American imaginary as well as how that same genre was also put to radical political ends by working-class, Black, and socialist writers. Her interest in anti-racist popular culture has led to collaborative editorial projects including the anthology Empire and the Literature of Sensation: An Anthology of Nineteenth-Century Popular Fiction from Rutgers University Press in 2007 and more recently NYU Press’s Keywords for Comic Studies, produced with co-editors Ramzi Fawaz and Deborah Whaley.

It is our great honor to recognize the dedication and vision of Dr. Shelley Streeby. Thank you for all you have done over the years to foster radical inclusiveness in science fiction, to promote public recognition of science fiction as a powerfully utopian genre, and to labor with such creative and collaborative energy at the undervalued but absolutely crucial world-building work of administering programs, securing grants, and running conferences. I should mention that several of Shelley’s mentees and colleagues helped the committee to put together a full picture of the many aspects of Shelley’s work at UCSD and that collaborative spirit strikes me as entirely in keeping with her ethos of community-building and collective self-determination and movingly reflects how important she has been to so many friends and comrades. The Clareson Award Committee takes great pleasure in presenting this award to the 2023 winner, Shelley Streeby. 

Innovative Research Award, outgoing chair: Anna Kurowicka

The committee decided to award the SFRA Innovative Research Award to Paweł Frelik’s “Power Games: Towards the Rhetoric of Energy in Speculative Video Games.” We thought this piece offers an insightful analysis of the way energy economy is treated, or more often ignored, in game scenarios and strategies, as well as about the motivation for this widespread ignorance in the game industry’s dependence on extractive industries and non-sustainable energy use. The article has a broad view of the field and a sure grasp of the scholarship and the theoretical issues within the field, coupled with an engaging style, which makes it useful both for the readers who are well-versed in game studies and those who are new to the field. Most of all, we anticipate that this is a piece that will generate new exciting conversations about science fiction’s engagement with matters of energy.

The SFRA Innovative Research Award Honorable Mention is awarded to Nora Castle’s “In Vitro Meat: Contemporary Narratives of Cultured Flesh.” The piece describes how in vitro meat has been treated in recent SF in ways that are entirely germane to debates over the ethical, economic, and ecological effects of producing and consuming IVM. In Castle’s reading, SF is a narrative vehicle for this sort of speculation. As such, the article is a particularly engaging example of using science fiction to illuminate contemporary issues.

Lifetime Contributions to SF Scholarship, outgoing chair: Isiah Lavender III

We are honored to present this year’s Award for Lifetime Contributions to SF Scholarship to Steven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English at Wayne State University in Detroit. For many years now Steve has treated science fiction as an intrinsic element of his wide-ranging and internationally recognized work in philosophy, cultural critique, film theory, and the cognitive sciences. More recently he has focused on the non-human turn in the humanities, as an influential proponent of the new materialisms in important monographs such as The Universe of Things: On Speculative Realism (2014) and Discognition (2016). Discognition won the Science Fiction and Technoculture Studies Book Award in 2017; it opens by making a case for science fiction thinking, because “perhaps we will be able to imagine what we are unable to know” (8).

Steve’s scholarship spans the mid-1980s to the present and it brings a whole new meaning to eclectic. His writings have influenced an array of fields, from poetics and postmodernism to multiple speculative media to the philosophies of Whitehead, Deleuze and Guattari – and, of course, to science fiction studies. It is a fascinating exercise to review his expansive body of work and simultaneously to appreciate the flows and flights of wild curiosity as well as the narrative fabric that his diverse research areas comprise. One feature of his science fiction research is his innovative convergence of philosophy, critical theory, and sf across media. His writings toggle between working through philosophy by way of engaging science fictions and theorizing science fictions by engaging them through particular philosophical theories, frameworks, and tools.

For anyone who has come across Steve’s invocations of Peter Watts in his writing or public talks, for instance, the elegance of his keen insights within this sf-philosophy toggling is truly awesome and inspiring. His 2015 book, No Speed Limit: Three Essays on Accelerationism, provides an excellent example of how his varied explorations over decades can merge into a powerful vision that emerges from time and mind spent in sf and that opens new pathways for colleagues and comrades to expand through our ongoing scholarship. No Speed Limit in particular played a significant role in articulating a Marxist critical approach that was not then dominant and that holds vast potential specifically in the field of sf research.

Steve’s engagements with neurodiversity also run through his work. In that sense, his research has contributed vanguard work in disability studies within sf studies from before it became a more prevalent area of exploration and analysis. His keen perceptions of music videos in The Rhythm Image (2022), as it pertains to the cyborg image of Dawn Richard in her video “Calypso,” allows us also to claim him as an Afrofuturist.

Steve is the author of 12 books. His recent Extreme Fabulations: Science Fictions of Life (2021) reads a diversity of science fictions in terms of what they can suggest about biological life in all its differences and vulnerabilities. And it’s good news that he has just completed the ms. for a new book tentatively titled Fluid Futures, “my effort to say all the stuff I want to say about science fiction.” In his preface, he writes that:

Fluid Futures considers the status of science fiction as a discourse that, in a meaningful sense, is about the future. Of course, the future is in principle unknowable. It is open, and not entirely determined in advance: fluid rather than fixed in stone. But the future is also not altogether arbitrary; it follows from the past and the present in some manner that needs to be described and unfolded. I claim that science fiction works towards just such an unfolding. It does not predict the actual future, but it offers a mimesis of futurity, understood as a kind of pressure, or incipience, that is already implicit within the present moment.

Steve’s accomplishments as a scholar and as a public intellectual range too widely for us to even begin to address them here. We are just lucky that some of his prodigious intellectual energy has been spent thinking about science fiction.

AWARD RECIPIENT STATEMENTS

Student Paper Award Winner, Josie Holland

Thank you all for having me. It is an honor to be awarded the SFRA Student Paper Award for my work “Constructing Radical Queer Futures and Deconstructing Noir Fiction in The Penumbra Podcast” presented at last year’s conference on Futures from the Margins. In a time when LGBTQ+ people are increasingly under threat in the U.S. and worldwide, creative work and scholarship showing that queer folks can and will exist in any kind of future and any kind of story are especially important to uplift, and I am honored to have my paper contribute to this message.

I would like to thank my mentor Kristen Bezio, for sharing my enthusiasm for critically reading queer popular culture and encouraging me to push my research beyond the page and into practice. I am also grateful to Kylie Korsnack, who introduced me to the Science Fiction Research Association and encouraged me to reach higher and higher with my academic work. I have learned so much from my peers in the past few years of attending SFRA conferences, and I look forward to continuing to learn from them in the years to come. Finally, I would like to thank the committee members Josh Pearson, Kania Green, and Kathryn Heffner for their time and consideration.

Mary Kay Bray Award Honorable Mention, Jeremy W. Brett

I am very much gratified to SFRA for recognizing me with the Honorable Mention for the Mary Kay Bray Award, and generally for the good work that SFRA does to further the cause of important, accessible scholarship in science fiction. I’m grateful that you believe my little observations merit attention and honor. I would like to thank Leimar Garcia-Siino for his very helpful editing suggestions, that assured the piece would be better than when I began it. I also would like to thank (not that they’re listening) the creators, cast and crew of WandaVision for the exciting, thought-provoking, and emotionally resonant series they put together, and special geeky thanks to the amazing Elizabeth Olsen for her beautiful performance as Wanda Maximoff.

Mary Kay Bray Award Winner, Dennis Wise

Receiving the Mary Kay Bray Award comes as a huge surprise to me, not to mention a great honor. Normally when one writes a review, you do it as service to the field. They’re a nice break from teaching and heavier types of academic writing, and for myself, at least, I often pick subjects on which I have only passing familiarity. Reviews are therefore good excuses for me to dive into little research tangents, and that’s exactly what happened with Amy Binns’s biography of John Wyndham. Although I had heard of Day of the Triffids and “cozy catastrophes” before, and dimly remembered watching the BBC adaptation of Chocky when I was a small child during the mid-1980s, I actually knew next to nothing about Wyndham himself or his work. So I quickly ordered every novel he’d ever written, and fell in love almost immediately. Nothing could have been better, I thought, than The Midwich Cuckoos … but then I read The Chrysalids. After that, Binns’s excellent biography was simply icing on the cake, and writing the review itself an added bonus.

So, please let me thank the SFRA Executive Committee and everyone who reads for these awards. Having served on awards committees myself, I know the time commitment they entail. Likewise, I’d like to thank Dominick Grace and his excellent work as reviews editor, and also of course Amy Binns, whose biography I whole-heartedly recommend. Thank you all, and your efforts are much appreciated.

SFRA Book Award Honorable Mention, Anne Stewart

What a tremendously exciting honor! I am thrilled to have Angry Planet: Decolonial Fiction and the American Third World recognized by the SFRA. I know it’s not the most sci-fi-oriented project in some ways, but in others it is a project absolutely committed to speculation and futurism, and I am deeply indebted to the work and imaginations of SFRA theorists in developing the reading practice in this project, which follows the angry earth as a conduit to survivable futures.

Book Award, Emily Midkiff

I would like to thank the SFRA and the book award committee for this honor. This book was a long time in the making, as any scholar who works with IRBs and large datasets knows well, and recognition like this makes those years of labor worthwhile.

I cannot express how much I appreciate this confirmation that childhood is a worthwhile area of study for science fiction scholarship. There was a time when both science fiction studies and children’s literature studies were both struggling for legitimacy and combining them seemed like it would only prevent either one from being taken seriously. Similarly, I am relieved at this indication that science fiction scholars are willing to embrace empirical methodology intruding into our field. Scientific methods are not a replacement for humanities-based science fiction studies, but I hope this award demonstrates that mixed methods have a lot to offer us—especially when dealing with topics that come with a lot of cultural bias and baggage, like the concept of childhood. Thank you all for taking me seriously while I played in the children’s section, and I hope that some of you will consider playing with me in all the data that our field has to offer.

Clareson Winner, Shelley S. Streeby

Thank you, Science Fiction Research Association and Executive Committee, for this honor. It is a lovely surprise to receive this year’s Thomas D. Clareson Award for Distinguished Service. I wish I could be there with you all, but my beloved father, James Alan Streeby, passed away this summer, and I have been busy taking charge of his affairs and spending time with my family in Iowa. As I write my thanks to you, I am remembering how Dad would often join me in the summers when I was directing the Clarion workshop. He would fly out and stay with me for a while in San Diego and often ended up coming along on the weekly car rides to Mysterious Galaxy for instructor readings. He was amazed at what a world-making project the Clarion workshop is, and how it fosters communities of care and love beyond the bio-family. As a marathon runner, track coach, and mentor to dozens of young women and men, Dad always modeled that for me. That is also one of the things I love most about science fiction: how it creates communities of care of various sorts that have lasting impact. It was a joy to be a part of Clarion communities for a big chunk of my life, more than twelve years. It reoriented my scholarship and how I connect my writing and teaching to the world. It was fun beyond measure. This award means a lot to me. Thanks again.

Lifetime Contributions to SF Scholarship Winner, Steven Shaviro
I would like to thank the Science Fiction Research Association for this award. I have published three volumes of science fiction scholarship and criticism to date, with a fourth book coming out in 2024. It is lovely to have my work in this field recognized.

When I was 9 years old, in 1963, my Uncle Morris, who was a French professor but also a science fiction fan, gave me Triplanetary by E. E. ‘Doc’ Smith to read. I loved it, and I became infatuated with science fiction, an infatuation that still exists for me today, six decades later.

Doc Smith might well seem more than a bit retro, sixty years after I first read him. Admittedly, his books are filled with the limitations and prejudices of mainstream white American culture at the time when he was writing, in the 1930s and 1940s. But the splashy excitements of space opera are still very much with us today, in books by writers like Valerid Valdes, Becky Chambers, Martha Wells, and many others. Such contemporary writers are much more politically savvy and sensitive, much more open to extreme possibilities, and much more multicultural, than Doc Smith ever was; but their books still contain much of the same charm, and many of the same thrills.

As I got older, I increasingly discovered how science fiction was often quite intellectually challenging, as well as being fun. I owe a great deal of my expanded understanding of the richness of sf to my comrades in graduate school in the late 1970s, Carl Freedman and John Rieder, both of whom are previous winners of the award that I am receiving today. Together we explored the writings of Philip K. Dick, Ursula Le Guin, and many other writers whose legacies remain vital today.

When I lived in Seattle from 1984 to 2004, I got to know a number of people from the science fiction community there; not scholars like myself, but brilliant sf writers such as Eileen Gunn and Nisi Shawl. I remain grateful for all I learned from them about science fiction from the perspective of its creators.

Above all, I have been an avid reader of science fiction over the past six decades. This is something that I will continue to do as long as I am able. My official academic specialty is film and media studies. Nonetheless, I value written science fiction in particular. I have read science fiction novels and stories quite extensively; but I am happy to know that there is still quite a lot of written sf that I haven’t yet gotten to, with more being produced every year. I am happy about how our horizons as science fiction fans have been broadened in recent years, with the increasing prominence and visibility of sf being written by women, by people of color, and by others who do not fit into the white-male-christian-heterosexual norm. I am also grateful that much more science fiction written in languages other than English has been translated, and made available to Anglophone readers such as myself, than ever before. Science fiction, in general, looks to the future; it extrapolates, speculates, and fabulates well beyond the limits of our oppressive and dangerous present moment. I am happy that, even though I do not write science fiction myself, I can contribute to its dissemination, and to our ability to enjoy it, to understand it, and to learn from it.


Candidate Statements for At-Large Executive Committee Position


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 4

From the SFRA Executive Committee


Candidate Statements for At-Large Executive Committee Position

The SFRA Board

Dear SFRA, please find below the candidate statements for this year’s candidates for the at-large positions on the executive committee. After this year’s special one-year pilot, these positions will have three year terms like the other positions on exec. Per our bylaws, we now enter a thirty-day period where additional candidates may present themselves. The bylaws describe the process this way:

Within 30 days of the publication of this slate of candidates in the SFRA Review, additional candidates may be nominated by submission of a petition signed by at least five persons of the membership in good standing entitled to vote in the election to the secretary of the association. At the end of this 30-day period nominations shall be closed and the ballot shall be prepared.

If you would like to take advantage of this process, please reach out to me and we can get the ball rolling. The ballot will be locked on November 30, and the ballot period will close on Friday, December 29.

Helane Androne (Miami University): I am happy to stand once again for the At-large position on the Executive Committee of the SFRA. I am currently Professor of English at Miami University of Ohio Regional campuses (open access), and I’m an Affiliate of the Global and Intercultural Studies Department. I teach courses in African American literature, Latine literatures, Critical Race and Ethnic Studies, Women’s Studies, and the Sacred in Science fiction–all which inevitably intersect and engage the premises and texts of Scifi and its conscientious questioning of the status quo. I am committed to teaching and learning practices that engage non/traditional students through multidisciplinary and multi-modal learning, and I seek to reflect that concern both in my courses and in my scholarship. My current project uses Chela Sandoval’s Methodology of the Oppressed alongside Malidoma Patrice Somé’s rite of passage teachings to point out how myth and magic operate as an activism of radical survival in black womanist SFF. I have recently engaged SFF to present on Love Theory, on anti-racism, on activism and resistance, on intersectionality and the image of God, and on methodologies of emancipation. Along with scholarly interests, I have concrete experience and skills that enhance my candidacy and, I hope, my ability to continue contributing productively to the complex discussions and decisions within the SFRA Executive Committee. For example, I have successfully written and co-written almost $200K in external and internal grants and I have presented for more than 70 conferences, workshops, and lectures. I also remain an active scholar, continuing to support the kind of multi-disciplinary knowledges represented in my interests. I like to think that my academic administrative experience chairing a department and co-directing a graduate program, my service on similarly complex committees—including serving as chair for the 1921 Award for 2 cycles at the American Literature Society—alongside my creative and entrepreneurial experiences as an independent magazine editor, writer, and serial entrepreneur, provide a useful perspective. As an At-large member of the SFRA, I believe I’ll bring a balance of academic experience, administrative conscientiousness, and scholarly aptitude, as well as energetic support for the diverse and expanding role of SFF.

Kania Green (Georgia Southern University): I am interested in serving as an SFRA Representative At-Large on the Executive Committee. As a member of SFRA for the past couple of years I have seen the value in the community that SFRA provides for those who have an interest in science fiction, and I would like to use my expertise to expand this community. My research focuses on how people utilize science fiction to access science and how this access promotes critical thinking. Through this research, we have discovered that many people who work in scientific and engineering fields have close ties to science fiction through print and media channels. This provides potentially untapped opportunities to engage students in content that is thought provoking while also entertaining. From comics to novels there are a myriad of genres and platforms to allow students to access science and literacy through fiction. I know personally, just attending SFRA Conferences for the past couple of years how I have come to consider differing world views and examine privilege through safe conversations around fictional people.

My current role at Georgia Southern University is that of Coordinator for the Center for STEM Education. Even though I have a doctoral degree, this is a staff level position that does not provide tenure benefits nor faculty status. Through this center, housed within the College of Education, we promote STEM education through both formal and informal educational opportunities across K-20 grades. We work with teachers in every field to provide engaging and hands-on opportunities for students often showcasing activities that get students thinking critically about outcomes. With Georgia’s recent focus on literacy across the state, we have begun to host professional development workshops for teachers utilizing science fiction to engage students in science fact. For example: utilizing The Hunger Games and having students consider what District 12 could utilize in order to produce food. Then students design their solution whether it be a greenhouse, water tower, electric grid, etc. Their solutions require that they have knowledge of the constraints of the story but engages the solution focused part of their brains through an engineering design process as well. In this way we are combining literature with STEM learning to improve critical thinking skills.

I think my unique experiences in working with science fiction from a researcher perspective could serve the membership well and potentially expand SFRA to more members. I have also served on the SFRA Student Paper Award Committee for the past 2 years and am currently chair of the Committee.

Gabriela Lee (University of Pittsburgh): As an academic and author from the Global South, I am very excited to renew my commitment as an at large member of the SFRA. I am looking forward to highlighting and raising up voices from my side of the world and bringing them into conversation with other scholars and writers from the Global North. I am also looking forward tocontinue supporting regular activities that the SFRA currently has and encouraging new initiatives, and I intend to bring my energy and work ethic to these projects. Outside of the SFRA, I am also the co-editor of an upcoming sourcebook on Philippine speculative fiction, soon to be published by the University of the Philippines Press. I am also currently a graduate student at the University of Pittsburgh, as well as a faculty member (on leave) at the University of the Philippines, where I teach creative writing, children’s literature, and Philippine literature in English. Broadly speaking, my creative and critical work has usually focused on intersections of children’s literature, speculative fiction, and the post/de/anti-colonial, especially the ways in which it manifests in Philippine literature. I hope that through the at large member position in the SFRA, I can contribute to making visible many creators and scholars who may not have had opportunities to be seen and heard, as well as learning from a community of like-minded scholars and writers. I look forward to serving SFRA community in imagining and moving towards a kinder, more compassionate world.


From the Vice President


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 4

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the Vice President

Ida Yoshinaga

As we head into the holidays, planning our first Estonia-set international meeting for May 2024, let’s take stock. From two successful European conferences—Oslo, 2022, and Dresden, 2023, both well-attended—and now helping to organize Tartu, 2024, we on the Executive Committee are evolving the 21st-century conference format to reflect “post”-COVID era changes in the world and in academia.

How can our in-person/hybrid meetings improve towards becoming more international as well as inclusive? For 2022 in Norway, we began offering a DEI workshop in addition to the other EC-sponsored activities (such as our annual Early-Career Researchers’ professional-development session, focused on tenure-track position searches or on scholarly publishing). During that Q&A session, Ph.D. students, postdocs, and adjuncts told us they had simply desired a gathering of various non-tenure track researchers who were on the job market, to talk amongst themselves. As a result, we scheduled such a session in the 2023 German conference this past August.

We also heard 2022 Oslo attendees respond that there was much theorizing about colonialism and Indigeneity at that meeting but much fewer actual Indigenous voices. So for the 2023 Dresden meeting, our DEI session featured a Native Aymara scholar from Bolivia, Ruben Darío Chambi, who’s doing doctoral work at LMU Munich. Chambi shared his research on Aymara in his home city, including both Aymara speculative-architectural expression, and settler literary utopias of Bolivia. Graciously, Leo Cornum’s superlative keynote on moon landings referenced this Ph.D. student’s presentation, so it was a (relatively) rare exchange, at an SFRA conference, between ideas of Native intellectuals from different parts of the globe—something we hope for more and more in the future.

For 2024 Estonia, we hope that among other goals/topics, to bring to the spotlight queer/trans speculative arts (the topic of our ECR DEI workshop). We are thrilled to feature among our three keynotes noted poet-writer-translator Bogi Takács, a hybrid scholar-artist whose multiple talents and knowledge sets we expect will enrich conference conversations.

The question of how to best support our LGBTQIA2S+ community members in this dystopian time of draconian governmental laws that threaten these members’ safety and very lives, has arisen many times in EC discussions about where to hold both upcoming conferences (Estonia being one of the first former Soviet countries to pass relatively progressive LGBTQIA2S+ legislation) and future meetings (we’ve had many talks about whether SFRA should be held at all in US states with strongly anti-Critical-Race-Theory and misogynist, in addition to anti-trans, laws).

We hope you can present in Estonia, too, and while attending—if you choose to participate in person—also enjoy the Tartu Literary Festival Prima Vista (https://tartu2024.ee/kirjandusfestival) held at about the same time, themed “Better or Worse Futures.” Many thanks to Jaak Tomberg and his team for putting together our Tartu meeting and coordinating it with the festival for an optimal sf-arts and sf-scholarship experience! They’re working in the spirit of utopia: may we all look forward to better futures indeed.

Don’t forget to submit your own conference abstract or proposal by November 24 (https://sfra.org/sfra-2023-conference)! And provide feedback to the hybrid Dresden meeting in our soon-to-be-emailed survey or directly to me (ida@hawaii.edu) or to Hugh (hugh.oconnell@umb.edu).


From the President


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 4

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the President

Hugh O’Connell

It’s hard to believe that the combined SFRA/GFF conference at TU-Dresden wrapped up over two months ago. My mind is still reeling from the various talks, panels, and roundtables I was able to attend virtually. While my own virtual attendance was a consequence of Covid-19 and quarantining in a hotel only a few miles from the actual going-ons, the move to hybrid conferences has certainly allowed for greater access and sharing of ideas across the board. The ability of the “Disruptive Imaginaries” team to integrate streaming so seamlessly into the conference—especially in those places where it hadn’t initially been planned for ahead of time, as in my personal case—was game changing. And please watch your inboxes for a forthcoming survey about the conference experience (whether virtual or in-person).

While it’s on my mind, I also want to take this opportunity to once again offer my thanks to TU-Dresden and all of their staff for welcoming and taking care of us both online and in-person. To our cohosts the GFF—we couldn’t have asked for a better organization to partner with. To the rest of the SFRA Executive Committee (especially Sarah Lohmann, SFRA Secretary, and former President Keren Omry for stepping-in and taking care of so many of the myriad tasks on the ground in Dresden that I couldn’t). And finally, a rousing thanks and congratulations to Moritz Ingwersen, Julia Gatermann, and the rest of their team for pulling off so smoothly and expertly such a spectacularly engaging and successful hybrid, dual-sponsored conference of over 300 in-person and online presenters. I honestly don’t know how they did it; but I’m sure as hell glad they did. I also want to offer my heartfelt congratulations to the award winners (Steven Shaviro, Paweł Frelik, Nora Castle (honorable mention), Shelley S. Streeby, Emily Midkiff, Dennis Wilson Wise, Jeremy Brett (honorable mention), and Josie Holland. I hope that everyone will take a couple of minutes to look at the awards sections of this issue of the SFRA Review and read over the committees’ and recipients’ remarks.

With Dresden in the rearview mirror, it’s now time to start looking forward to SFRA 2024 “Transitions,” already rapidly approaching on the horizon (May 7th – 11th). The conference, hosted by Jaak Tomberg and his team at the University of Tartu in Estonia, promises to be just as exciting. Along with the usual conference-style programming, SFRA 2024 will take place concurrently with the Tartu International Literary Festival Prima Vista “Futures Better and Worse” whose programming includes a bevy of literary and cultural artists from around the globe. Due to the logistics of planning and travel, the conference proposal deadline is a little earlier than usual on November 24th. Please see the conference website at sfra2024.ut.ee and make sure to get those proposals in; you aren’t going to want to miss this one!

Speaking of events that that you won’t want to miss, if you have an event that you’d like the SFRA to distribute through its email lists or social media sites, or you have other ideas or concerns about the work the organization is doing, please don’t hesitate to reach out to me at hugh.oconnell@umb.edu. I’d love to hear from you.


From the Vice President


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 3

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the Vice President

Ida Yoshinaga

Dear fellow Science Fiction Research Association members:

With your hearty responses to our call for papers and our registration deadline—adding up to 300+ participants!—“Disruptive Imaginations” looks to be one of the largest academic meetings of our organization ever [thanks also to our co-sponsor, German fantasy-studies research group GFF (https://fantastikforschung.de/en) , which agreed to share our two conferences’ venues and content].

In addition to the current themes covered by conference paper sessions as well as by the splendid German cultural studies events put together by dedicated TU Dresden organizers Julia Gatermann and Moritz Ingwersen (and team), several Executive Committee-sponsored events on speculative-fiction studies, can be attended by registrants virtually or in person (the following is all in Central European Time):

Wed. 8/16, 9:30-11 a.m. (Panel 7, ABS/E11 Auditorium & online): “Early Career Scholar Event: Diffrakt on Nourishing Imaginative SF/F Thought-Making, Artistry, Community” featuring members of thr German speculative-arts collective “diffrakt: centre for theoretical periphery” (http://diffrakt.space/en) Moritz Gansen and Hannah Wallenfels share how Diffrakt combines inventive pedagogy with sf theory and other intellectual discourses, to create a community-engaged arts practice. Thanks to SFU’s Ali Sperling for helping make the contact with this group and for suggesting their session in the first place!

Wed. 8/16, 16:30-18:00 (p.m.) (ABS/E11 Auditorium & online): “SFRA Business Meeting.”

Thur. 8/17, 15:30-17:00 (p.m.) (Panel 44, ABS/E08 & online): “SFRA: Equity/Diversity/ Inclusion Event: Indigenous Futurism in Latin America—The Case Study of the Aymara in El Alto, Bolivia” featuring Aymara Ph.D. student Ruben Darío Chambi Mayta of LMU Munich’s Indigeneities in the 21st Century Project, who’ll share his research on how a Native Bolivian group has responded to settler colonialism including the state’s “Buen Vivir” (“Living Well”) campaign which extracts culture from Aymara protest history and struggles (https://www.indigen.eu/projects/core-projects/indigeneity-beyond-buen-vivir-the-aymara-case-in-bolivia). Thanks to UFL’s Libby Ginway for serving as discussant!

Fri. 8/18, 09:30-11:00 a.m. (Panel 46, ABS/E11 Auditorium & online): “[SFRA Early Career Scholars Roundtable] SF on the Market: Advice from Early Career Researchers in Pursuing an SF Studies Career” will feature global Ph.D. students and postdocs participating in a vibrant conversation & audience Q&A about concerns, strategies, and issues about being on the academic job market, including Patrick Brock Nora Castle, Reem Mansour, Yilun Fan, Candice Thornton, Andrew Erickson, Rose Moreno, and Uchechi Anomachi. Their expertise collectively spans the breadth of today’s sf/fantasy studies, from Afrofuturism, to film and visual studies, to translation and literary studies, to ethnic and cultural speculative works (and so on!). Thanks to SFRA Secretary Sarah Lohmann for chairing and organizing!

These events evolved from feedback received from participants during last year’s Oslo (2022) EC-sponsored Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion session. We’ll similarly survey those who attend this year’s EC sessions; please provide feedback then to that instrument, or directly to Hugh (hugh.oconnell@umb.edu) or me (ida@hawaii.edu), on what you’d like to see in the future as well as how the sessions went.

Questions about the TU Dresden conference?: Please contact Moritz and Julia at disruptiveimaginations@tu-dresden.de.


From the President


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 3

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the President

Hugh O’Connell

The dreaded date of August 1st looms heavy. That period when time compression kicks in, and all those research projects and new syllabi that we had “all summer” to work on will now be crammed into the final waning weeks and days of summer break. However, amongst the scramble to finish that work we swore that we wouldn’t put off—again—this year, we can look forward to the upcoming combined SFRA/GFF “Disruptive Imaginations” conference at TU-Dresden. Along with all of the research presentations and special events organized by the fantastic team of Julia Gatermann and Moritz Ingwersen, everyone should check out Vice President Ida Yoshinaga’s column in this issue for a rundown of the special panels and events sponsored by the SFRA Executive Committee (including programming that specifically addresses early career scholars and Equity/Diversity/Inclusion).

And perhaps this is a good time to offer some other calendrical reminders. Typically, at this point in August, I’d be using this President’s column to reflect on the end of the conference. However, following the theme of this year’s conference in Dresden, “disruption” is working its way through the usual SFRA calendar. The SFRA’s annual conference traditionally takes place in mid-to-late June, after many of us have turned in final grades and projects and are looking for a well-deserved break and chance to catch up with our friends and colleagues. However, this is a reminder that not only this year’s but also next year’s conferences are bucking this tradition as we continue to partner with some of our European colleagues. So, while it may feel odd since we haven’t had our 2023 conference yet, we should however also be planning for a quick turnaround, as the 2024 conference has been penciled in for the second week of May. This may be a difficult time for some of us in the US to get away (a quick look reveals that it coincides with my last week of spring classes), but it will certainly be worth it. While we will hopefully be presenting more details about this timing at the Dresden conference, part of the reason for this earlier 2024 conference date is to coincide with the “Futures Better and Worse” literary festival, which features a number of events and writers that will be of interest to the SFRA membership. So, please be on the lookout for more information at the conference and then through the usual lists and social media sites!

Speaking of events that are of interest to SFRA members, if you have an event that you’d like the SFRA to distribute through its email lists or social media sites, or you have other ideas or concerns about the work the organization is doing, please don’t hesitate to reach out to me at hugh.oconnell@umb.edu. I’d love to hear from you.


From the Vice President


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 2

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the Vice President

Ida Yoshinaga

The burgeoning excitement for our annual summer conference, evidenced by greater numbers of paper and panel proposals received for last year’s vibrant gathering in Oslo, and now for the upcoming Dresden 2023 meeting (including those submitted by in-person attendees of the latter), invigorates again the pressing question of how to expand science-fiction studies past our default Western and Global North circuits, to encompass speculative-fiction production and reception in other parts of the world.

From suggestions by members of our SFRA country representatives group, by our general membership, and by global CoFutures colleagues in Norway, we on the Executive Council have expanded these representatives to include SFRA members from China (Regina Kanyu Wang), Ireland (Thomas Connolly, pulling double duty as webmaster), Portugal (Tânia Cerqueira and Manuel José Sousa Oliveira), the Philippines (Gabriela Lee, also our At-Large Executive Committee member), in addition to adding reps of our Australia group (Yimin Xu).

Welcome representatives! If you’ve suggestions for more dedicated SFRA folk who can meet virtually 3-4 times a year; share what’s going on with sf production in their own regions, nations, or languages (such as conferences, publications, events, and trends); and advise the EC on ideas for the international future of the organization among other matters, please contact Hugh O’Connell, myself, or other members of the EC.

Here’s our current list of country reps: https://sfra.org/country-representatives/

At the International Conference of the Fantastic in the Arts a few months ago in March, the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts BIPOC Caucus held sessions on exploring global methodologies and theories for speculative genre and media. Inspired by the annual theme that underscored contributions from Africanfuturism and Afrofuturism to our evolving discourse on fantastic and speculative arts, as well as by cross discussions that have been arising in Indigenous Futurism and Latinx Futurism, the Caucus has been trying to reach beyond the standard Suvinian and Todorovian conceptualizations of our family of non-real and semi-real genres. Researchers Suparno Banerjee, Nicola Hunt, Taryne Taylor, Candice Thornton, and Guest Scholar Isiah Lavender III discussed topics such as postcolonial and Indigenous terminologies, translation challenges, diversity of regional production, and continuity of spirituality in transnational diaspora.

This August, we expect that both the Executive Committee’s sponsored sessions will follow these worldwide sf themes. They are: two professional-development panels for early-career scholars, including one made up of international postdocs and graduate students looking for work in the global job market; and one diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging session themed to decolonial and Indigenous Futurist speculative methodologies and related research protocols. Additionally, panel proposals accepted include one similar to the ICFA global theories/methods discussion, put together by German cultural studies scholar Sonja Fritzsche and her colleagues from Peter Lang Publishing’s World Science Fiction Series (on which board I happen to belong).

What is world science fiction? Hoping you can share your mindful, enriching responses this summer with us at TU Dresden, “disrupting” conventional imagination.


From the President


SFRA Review, vol. 53 no. 2

From the SFRA Executive Committee


From the President

Hugh O’Connell

As I look out my office window here in Boston and notice the trees starting to bud, my mind turns to two things: the end of the Spring semester and the annual SFRA conference. This year, as part of our efforts to increase the SFRA’s international representation, we’re partnering with der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Fantastikforschung (the German Association for Research in the Fantastic, or GfF) for the joint Disruptive Imaginations Conference.

After attending the virtual 2021 conference hosted by Graham J. Murphy and Seneca College and missing out entirely on the 2022 conference hosted by Bodhisattva Chattopadhyay and the CoFutures collective due to contracting Covid-19, I’m very much looking forward to attending the Disruptive Futures conference in-person, while also taking part in the virtual programming. The organizers have received a stunning number of proposals from an international pool of applicants, and we’re quite optimistic that the conference will continue the ongoing work of globally expanding the SFRA by bringing this internationally diverse array of scholars into conversation with one another.

By now, everyone who sent a proposal should have heard back from the selection committee, but if for some reason you are still waiting, please contact the conference organizers, Julia Gatermann and Moritz Ingwersen at disruptive.imaginations@tu-dresden.de. And for those attending the conference in-person, as you begin to make your travel plans, make sure to check out the resources that the organizers are providing at the dedicated conference website: https://disruptiveimaginations.com. Here, you can find information in both English and German about accommodations, getting around Dresden, and some of the special events that are being planned for both in-person and virtual conference attendees, with more information to be added as we get closer to the start of the conference. And speaking of planning, we’ll be contacting the recipients of the SFRA’s travel grants in the first week of May.

Looking ahead, we’re scheduling another European conference in Estonia in 2024, before heading back to the United States for 2025 and 2026. The SFRA depends on volunteer conference organizers; so, if you would like to see the conference come to your area, please consider putting in a bid to host the conference (the SFRA is currently taking proposals for 2027 and beyond). You can contact me directly, and I’ll be happy to discuss what hosting the conference entails and how to go about putting a proposal together. Even if you are only curious at this stage, please feel free to reach out!


From the President


SFRA Review, vol. 53, no. 4

From the President


From the President

Hugh O’Connell


It’s hard to believe that I’m writing my first SFRA President’s column. I attended my first SFRA conference in 2015 at Stony Brook. It alternately seems like yesterday and a lifetime ago. It was a career-changing experience; the people I met there became mentors, collaborators, and friends, and I finally understood what others meant when they talked about their “academic communities.” Over the last couple of years, the SFRA’s executive board have been making changes both large and small to make sure that this sort of experience is the norm for all our members. I’m looking forward to serving as President and continuing this work with them.

Speaking of service, I want to extend my heartfelt thanks to our outgoing E-Board members: Sean Guynes, Keren Omry, and Gerry Canavan. Along with serving as Secretary from 2020-2022, Sean was editor of the SFRA Review from 2018-21 and helped institute many of its innovative transformations. Keren has served in a great number of roles, most recently as Immediate Past President, providing institutional memory, continuity, and advise to the Executive Board, and before that as President, and before that cycling through just about every award committee. Seriously, many, many thanks, Keren! Finally, I want to acknowledge our outgoing President, Gerry Canavan, who had the unenviable task of steering the SFRA through one of its most tumultuous periods: dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic, cancelled conferences, and the move to online and hybrid conferences, alongside all the other usual tasks. Before he escapes entirely, he’ll be serving as the Immediate Past President for the next three years (just when he thought he was out… we pull him back in!).

Keeping the ball rolling, I’d like to thank our continuing E-Board members, Ida Yoshinaga (VP), Tim Murphy (Treasurer), Thomas Connolly (Webmaster), and Aisha Matthews (Conference Committee), as well as welcome our incoming members, Sarah Lohmann (Secretary), and our first ever At-Large members, Helane Androne and Gabriela Alejandra Lee. And for those out there who would like to get more involved with the SFRA and add their names to this illustrious list of volunteers, watch out for a forthcoming call for the new Outreach officer position.

Looking ahead, we’re all very excited for the upcoming “Disrupted Imaginations” joint SFRA and German Association for Research in the Fantastic (GfF) conference in Dresden, Germany (August 15-19, 2023). The CFP is currently circulating and can be found on the SFRA website. This is a great opportunity for the SFRA to continue building upon its international outreach efforts and to forge greater ties with the GfF. As a reminder, SFRA members are eligible to apply for travel grants of up to $500.

Finally, we know that there have been a couple of issues with the new website. We are working on getting these resolved, and we thank you for your patience as we continue down the WordPress rabbit hole. In the meantime, if you encounter any problems, please continue to reach out to us.