On the Hugo Awards: Two Scholarly-ish Projects to Come

Reading Time

As you may well be aware, I am currently working on two projects related to the Hugo Awards.  I know I’ve mentioned both of these at some point, though the second is certainly the most visible of these projects.  I’m also sure you know that the Hugo Awards have been enormously controversial this year, earning mainstream attention in major newspapers and entertainment sites such as The Guardian, The Wall Street Journal, Entertainment Weekly, NPR, Boing Boing, and so on.  That conversation is still happening; one need only look at File 770 to see it.

 A lot of us in SF/F circles heard of the rumors circulating about the Hugos in the weeks prior to their announcement.  I heard many rumors from some of my friends, and many more circulated (or were revealed as truth) through RP/SP circles and through those with far more industry clout than myself.  Since last year’s Hugo Awards were also controversial, I had the feeling that these rumors were going to indicate a blow-up that we hadn’t yet seen.  And so I turned to a friend of mine for help:  Aaron Beveridge.

Aaron is one of the co-creators of MassMine, along with Nicholas Van Horn. MassMine was created with the intent of helping academics acquire meaningful data from social media platforms (specifically, Twitter).  Their program is pretty complicated, so I’ll let you go to the website and learn all about it (there’s a video and everything!).  Aaron, it turns out, is one of those enthusiastic individuals who believes, as I do, that collaboration is critical to academic work, and so it didn’t take any effort at all to convince him to help me collect data and put together the projects below.

This post serves as an official announcement for the projects that Aaron and I are working on.  These include the following:

1. MassMine-ing the Hugo Awards:  Social Media Reactions and What the Data Tell Us

That’s not so much a working title as just a title I’m giving this project until we actually write it.  I asked Aaron to start mining Twitter a day or so before the Hugo Awards finalists were announced because I knew from rumors that it would be controversial.  And, boy howdy, it was controversial.  Aaron mined Twitter for roughly two straight weeks and has already begun compiling charts, connections, etc.

What we intend to do with this information is write an academic paper about the data:  what it tells us about the Hugo Awards and the people involved (literally or in conversation with it), how that data ties to the existing (and past) conversation, and so on.  This will be a pretty complicated work, but it is a project that we both believe in because we think it is important (not just to academia but to sf/f at large).

We’re also going to write less-academic essays concerning the data and hope to publish them online in an appropriate venue (Strange Horizons, perhaps).

Additionally, we have already discussed running a second MassMine crunch for the days immediately preceding and the weeks immediately following the announcement of the Hugo Awards winners.  Given the controversy already surrounding the awards this year, we can’t imagine any scenario in which there won’t be some kind of controversy over the winners; for that reason, we think the conversation (and the data we can get from it) will be equally informative about what people are saying, who is saying it, and how the data points connect.

We don’t have a set timetable for completion as yet, but we do hope to have something about our data out by the end of the year.

2. The Hugo Awards:  Perspectives from Non-U.S. Fandom

You may recall that I ran a survey of non-U.S. fans to get their perspectives on the Hugos.  The survey included questions about their voting “habits,” how they perceived the Hugos as an entity (its American-ness, importance, etc.), and how they perceived the current debate over the Rabid / Sad Puppies controversy (more particularly, what they thought about the RP/SP’s actions).  I intended the survey as a general (and anonymous) information grab, though I certainly speculated about the responses I would receive.  The survey garnered almost 400 responses and has confirmed a lot of the things I suspected before I even created the survey.

At the moment, Aaron and I are working on an essay for Strange Horizons (who have expressed interest) which will analyze the information provided in the survey.  Aaron is collating the data into useful charts and so on, as he is a big data guy, and I’m, well, an English grad student who doesn’t work with data on a regular basis.  Together, we’re going to work on an essay explaining the results (a la the previous project) and submit it to Strange Horizons.  You can also expect us to incorporate some of these results in the 1st project, since they are intimately related.

Both of these projects will take time.  In the case of the 1st, it’ll take a lot of time because of the amount of data we’re working with and the amount of data we still want to collect; it’ll also take time because academic publishing is slow as molasses (for good reason, given that so many rely on the peer review process).  We’ll do our best to do write-ups on the data as we work towards publication.  At the very least, you know these projects are coming.

We hope they will spark a lot of conversation, too.

If you have any questions about either project, feel free to leave them in the comments.  Aaron and I will address them to the best of our ability!

Email
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Digg
Reddit
LinkedIn

5 Responses

Leave a Reply

Follow Me

Newsletter

Support Me

Recent Posts

Book Review: Start Finishing by Charlie Gilkey (2022)

Sometime near the end of the Spring semester, I decided it was time to take another crack and reorganizing my life. I’ve gone through years of on again / off again burnout, some of it my own fault (I’m disorganized and try to do too much) and some of it a consequence of things about which I have no control (my former university essentially bankrupted itself, forcing me to find a new job in my field, and I’ve since moved twice — the short version). All that burnout and overfilled plate-ism has made it harder to keep up with grading and find the energy to complete tasks on time. So it seemed only logical to use my university library privileges to borrow a variety of recommend productivity and project management books to see what advice, systems, etc. are out there.

Read More »

A Reading List of Dystopian Fiction and Relevant Texts (Apropos of Nothing in Particular)

Why would someone make a list of important and interesting works of dystopian fiction? Or a suggested reading list of works that are relevant to those dystopian works? There is absolutely no reason other than raw interest. There’s nothing going on to compel this. There is nothing in particular one making such a list would hope you’d learn. The lists below are not an exhaustive list. There are bound to be texts I have forgotten or texts you think folks should read that are not listed. Feel free to make your own list and tell me about it OR leave a comment. I’ll add things I’ve missed! Anywhoodles. Here goes:

Read More »

Duke’s Best EDM Tracks of 2024

And so it came to pass that I finished up my annual Best of EDM [Insert Year Here] lists. I used to do these on Spotify before switching to Tidal, and I continued doing them on Tidal because I listen to an absurd amount of EDM and like keeping track of the tunes I love the most. Below, you will find a Tidal playlist that should be public. You can listen to the first 50 tracks right here, but the full playlist is available on Tidal proper (which has a free version just like Spotify does). For whatever reason, the embedded playlist breaks the page, and so I’ve opted to link to it here and at the bottom of this post. Embeds are weird. Or you can pull songs into your preferred listening app. It’s up to you. Some caveats before we begin:

Read More »