Futurians

Futurians

The Futurians were an influential group of science fiction fans, many of whom became editors and writers as well. The Futurians were based in New York City and were a major force in the development of science fiction writing and science fiction fandom in the years 1937-1945.

Origins of the group

As described in Isaac Asimov's autobiography "In Memory Yet Green", the Futurians spun off from the Greater New York Science Fiction Club (headed by Sam Moskowitz, later an influential SF editor and historian) over ideological differences, with the Futurians wishing to take a more overt political stance. Other sources indicate that Donald A. Wollheim was pushing for a more left wing direction with a goal of leading fandom toward a political ideal, all of which Moskowitz resisted. As a result, Wollheim broke off from the Greater New York group and founded the Futurians, cite journal
last =Kyle
first =David
title =SaM -- Fan Forever
journal =Mimosa
issue =21
pages =7–10
date =Dec. 1997
url =http://www.jophan.org/mimosa/m21/kyle.htm
accessdate = 24Apr2007
] the fans following Moskowitz reorganizing into the Queens Science Fiction Club.

Frederik Pohl, in his autobiography "The Way the Future Was", said that the origins of the Futurians started with the Science Fiction League founded by Hugo Gernsback in 1934, the New York City local chapter of which was called the "Brooklyn Science Fiction League" or BSFL, and headed by G. G. Clark.

Wollheim, John Michel, and Robert A. W. Lowndes were also members of the BSFL. Along with Pohl, the four started calling themselves the "Quadrumvirate". Pohl commenting about that time said "we four marched from Brooklyn to the sea, leaving a wide scar of burned out clubs behind us. We changed clubs the way Detroit changes tailfins, every year had a new one, and last year's was junk".

There were several club names during that period of time, before finally the founding of the Futurians. In 1935 there was the "East New York Science Fiction League" (ENYSFL), later the "Independent League for Science Fiction" (ILSF). In 1936 came the International Cosmos Science Club (ICSC) which also involved Will Sykora. Pohl then says that "on reflection 'Cosmos' seemed to take in a bit more territory than was justified, as we changed it to the International Scientific Association (it wasn't International either, but then it also wasn't scienctific)". The ISA then was renamed New York Branch-International Scientific Association (NYB-ISA).

In 1937, after the falling out with Will Sykora and others, the "Quadrumvirate" went on to found the Futurians. Will Sykora then founded the Queens Science Fiction League with Sam Moskowitz and James V. Taurasi. Later the QSFL changed into New Fandom. Pohl said as the conflicts between New Fandom and the Futurians were "Addicted to Feuds" and that "No CIA nor KGB ever wrestled so valiantly for the soul of an emerging nation as New Fandom and the Futurians did for science fiction".

Most of the group's members also had professional ambitions within science fiction and related fields, and collectively were very effective thus, as the roster of members below suggests. At one point in the earliest 1940s, approximately half of all the pulp sf and fantasy magazines in the U.S. were being edited by Futurians: Frederik Pohl at the Popular Publications offshoot Fictioneers, Inc. ("Astonishing Stories" and "Super-Science Stories"); Robert Lowndes at Columbia Publications, most notably with "Science Fiction" and "Future Fiction" (though through the decade to come Lowndes's responsibilities would expand to other types of fiction magazine in the chain), and Donald Wollheim at the very marginal Albing Publications with the short-lived, micro-budgeted "Cosmic Stories" and "Stirring Science Stories" (Wollheim soon moved on to Avon Books; Doë "Leslie Perri" Baumgardt also worked on a romance fiction title for Albing). Most of these projects had small editorial budgets, and relied in part or occasionally entirely on contributions from fellow Futurians for their contents.

Political tendencies

At the time the Futurians were formed, Donald Wollheim was strongly attracted by communism and believed that followers of science fiction "should actively work for the realization of the scientific world-state as the only genuine justification for their activities and existence". cite book |last=Carr |first=Terry |title=Classic Science Fiction: The First Golden Age |year=1979 |publisher= Robson Books |id=ISBN 0-86051-070-0 p. 430 ] It was to this end that Wollheim formed the Futurians, and many of its members were in some degree interested in the political applications of science fiction.

Hence the group included supporters of Trotskyism, like Merril, and others who would have been deemed far left for the era (Frederik Pohl became a member of the Communist Party in 1936, but later quit in 1939). On the other hand several members were political moderates or apolitical, and in the case of James Blish arguably right-wing. Damon Knight in "The Futurians" indicates that Blish at that time felt Fascism was interesting in theory, if repellent as it was then being practiced. More solid evidence is that Blish admired the work of Oswald Spengler.

Fredrick Pohl, in The Way the Future Was said Wollheim voted for Republican Presidential Candidate Alfred Landon in 1936.

Members included

* Isaac Asimov
* Elise Balter (also known as Elsie Wollheim)
* James Blish
* Hannes Bok
* Daniel Burford
* Chester Cohen
* Rosalind Cohen
* Harry Dockweiler (also known as Dirk Wylie)
* Jack Gillespie
* Virginia Kidd
* Damon Knight
* Cyril Kornbluth
* Mary Byers (also known as Mary Kornbluth)
* Walter Kubilius
* David Kyle
* Herman Leventman
* Robert A. W. Lowndes
* Judith Merril
* John Michel
* Frederik Pohl
* Leslie Perri, a pseudonym of Doris "Doë" Baumgardt
* Jack Rubinson
* Arthur W. Saha
* Larry Shaw
* Richard Wilson
* Donald A. Wollheim

Notes

ee also

* Science fiction fandom
* 1st World Science Fiction Convention

References

* "In Memory Yet Green" by Isaac Asimov (1979)
* "The Futurians" by Damon Knight (1977)
* "The Way The Future Was" by Frederik Pohl (1978)
* "All Our Yesterdays" by Harry Warner, Jr. (1969)

External links

* http://ebbs.english.vt.edu/20th/etudes/anderson/futurians.html
* [http://media-in-transition.mit.edu/science_fiction/profiles/pohl.html Frederik Pohl profile with several paragraphs on the Futurians]
* [http://www.sff.net/people/diccon/FOXTROT.HTM Fancyclopedia II: F] (see the entries under FUTURIANS, and FUTURIAN HOUSES)
* [http://www.jophan.org/mimosa/author_list.html#kyle Articles about the Futurians and old Fandom by David Kyle]
* [http://www.jophan.org/mimosa/m21/kyle.htm Moskowitz, the Futurians and the Great Exclusion Act of 1939 by David Kyle]
* [http://jophan.org/mimosa/m29/kyle.htm Caravan to the Stars by David Kyle]


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