No, I’m not going to talk about the Hugo Awards and all the drama associated with them in recent years. I want to address a particular category that was introduced in the 1990s and has been on the ballot sporadically since then.
A bit of background first. The Hugo Awards were named Hugo Gernsback, who was the editor of the first pulp devoted solely to science fiction, Amazing Stories. The Hugos were first presented at the 1953 Worldcon. There were none awarded in 1954, but they have been awarded annually every year since 1955.
In the mid-1990s, the Retroactive Hugos, commonly referred to as the Retro-Hugos were added to the list of categories which may be considered for an award. They can be given 50, 75, or 100 years after a Worldcon in which no Hugos were awarded. These years are 1939-1941, 1946-1952, and 1954. It is up the Worldcon of any given year as to whether a Retro-Hugo will be awarded. They have been given in 1996 (1946), 2001 (1951), 2004 (1954), and 2014 (1939). They will be given this year for 1941, meaning that stories published in 1940 are eligible.
I see both positive and negative aspects of this. Continue reading









