Official Announcement: Shelley Jackson, Virtual Honored Guest
FOGcon regrets to announce that one of our Honored Guests, Shelley Jackson, cannot attend FOGcon.
Although Shelley won’t be with us in person, she is breaking new ground as our first virtual Honored Guest. We will have a reading of one of her new stories. In addition, she has sent us her Skin, a short film that is not quite a documentary, about the Skin project. We will show the video, and following that, there will be a moderator-led discussion of the video, the project as a whole, and the rest of her body of work.
One of the limitations of The (Human) Body as currently constituted is that it can’t perform bilocation. Shelley Jackson has been detained at home by the arrival of a 13-month-old emissary from the future. Shelley and her partner are busy around the clock caring their new daughter, who arrived unexpectedly early from Ethiopia. As an SF/F convention about The Body, we are extremely pleased to welcome this new fan.
Nalo Hopkinson will be present at FOGcon and doing her reading and panels live and in person.
More Liberal Photography Policy
We’ve updated the photography policy to allow members to take more pictures. Here’s the new policy:
Please read carefully. This policy has changed from last year.
Almost everyone who has a cell phone has a camera, and almost everyone who comes to FOGcon has a cell phone. Video and audio recording and photography for personal archival use only is generally okay, unless individuals make it clear that they do not wish to be photographed or filmed, in which case any photography or recording of them is expressly forbidden.
Please be polite and ask before taking photographs or recordings. We suggest that photographs be taken before or after a program event to avoid distracting panelists and audience members from their discussion.
You agree to be solely responsible for clearing any and all rights and permissions for any use(s) you might make of the photographs, recordings,transcripts and similar material you take from the convention. Such material may not be posted to any commercial website or commercially operated streaming server including but not limited to YouTube, nor used for any commercial purpose whatsoever. Please ask permission of the subjects before posting to any generally available web sites including unlocked Flickr, Facebook, DreamWidth, or LiveJournal accounts. Your participation in FOGcon does not permit you to make use of FOGcon intellectual property. Other than for your purely personal, archival use, you may not use any FOGcon intellectual property for any purpose without the express written consent of FOGcon .
Thanks to our friends at WisCon for graciously sharing their policy with us.
We Have a Winner!
We are pleased to announce that the winning entry in the 2012 FOGcon student writing contest is “Skinned” by Ivy Blaine. Ms. Blaine is an MFA student at Mills College. We’d like to thank all entrants to this year’s contest, and encourage them to keep writing and submitting their work.
– Wendy Shaffer, Writing Contest Coordinator
Looking for a FOGcon Roommate?
FOGcon starts four weeks from tomorrow. Do you know where your roommate is? Or who?*
If you have a hotel reservation you’d like to share, or don’t have a reservation but want to stay overnight, this is the place to find someone with complementary needs.
*No, not whom. I thought of that myself.
The FOGcon Reading List: Other SF/F about the Body
This year’s FOGcon theme is The Body in SF/F, and we have wonderful Honored Guests who have written on that topic. Nalo Hopkinson, Shelley Jackson, and the late Mary Shelley. I’ve posted their bibliographies to the site for members who want to read up before the con.
I’d love to post more suggestions of great books and stories on the subject. What comes to your mind as the most illuminating, powerful, or influential SF/F writing about the body? In addition to listing titles and authors, you could tell us a bit about your suggestions.
The first ones I think of are these:
Samuel Delany, “Aye, and Gomorrah”
Ursula K. Le Guin, The Left Hand of Darkness
Matt Ruff, Set This House in order
Cordwainer Smith, “Scanners Live in Vain”
James Tiptree, Jr., “The Girl Who Was Plugged In”
What are your favorite fictional explorations of what it means to have or be a body? Of the ways a slight anatomical difference can change everything? Of health, illness, reproduction, death, body image?
The FOGcon Reading List: Honored Guests
If you’re looking for something to read between now and FOGcon, these works by our Honored Guests are a great place to start.
Nalo Hopkinson
- Brown Girl in the Ring (1998)
- Midnight Robber (2000)
- Whispers from the Cotton Tree Root: Caribbean Fabulist Fiction (2000, ed.)
- Skin Folk (2001)
- Mojo: Conjure Stories (2003, ed.)
- The Salt Roads (2003)
- So Long Been Dreaming (2004, ed.)
- The New Moon’s Arms (2007)
Shelley Jackson
Hypertexts
- Patchwork Girl (1995)
- My Body (1997)
- The Doll Games (with Pamela Jackson, 2001)
Books
- The Melancholy of Anatomy (short story collection, 2002)
- Half Life (novel, 2006)
Mary Shelley
- Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus (1818)
- The Last Man (1826)
FOGcon People of Color Meetup
We’re glad to announce that a POC meetup is being arranged again this year. If you’re interested, go to Oyceter’s blog and take the poll.
Wanted: FOGcon Videos!
FOGcon has some fascinatingly quirky videos on YouTube. Now we’re looking for a somewhat more straightforward video explaining what FOGcon is and giving something of the flavor.
Are you interested? Email us at vid@fogcon.org
Suggest Next Year’s Theme
We’ve had two years of this process so far, and now it’s time to ask for your suggestions and advice — what do you think would make a great theme for 2013? Who would be the perfect Honored Guests to fit that theme? Let us know by going to http://fogcon.org/ideas-for-
Vote for Programming Now!
On February 17 the doors to our mysterious data vault will clang shut, and the steampunk geniuses inside will begin the mammoth and complex task of scheduling all FOGcon programming. That’s less than two weeks away.
If you want a voice in FOGcon, vote for the panels you’re interested in attending. Volunteer to participate in the panels where you can make a contribution.



