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FAPA

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The Fantasy Amateur Press Association or FAPA ("FAP-uh") is science fiction fandom 's longest-established amateur press association ("apa"). It was founded in 1937 by Donald A. Wollheim , John B. Michel and others to facilitate the circulation of fanzines. They were inspired to create FAPA by their memberships in some of the non- science fiction amateur press associations, which they learned about from H. P. Lovecraft . (It is also fandom's longest-running organization of any kind, preceding the founding of the runner-up, the National Fantasy Fan Federation , by nearly four years.)

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9-568: FAPA can refer to: Fantasy Amateur Press Association Fatty acid primary amide , a family of signalling compounds The (United States) Federal Administrative Procedure Act Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association First Amendment Protected Activity Formosan Association for Public Affairs Florida Academy of Physician Assistants Topics referred to by

18-442: A minimum. The constitution was again revised in 1958 (also by Speer) to incorporate amendments, bylaws, and practices adopted since 1947. Another major revision occurred in 2001 under the oversight of Robert Lichtman (Secretary-Treasurer since 1986 and still holding that office), clarifying and conforming constitutional requirements with actual practice. During the 1950s and 1960s FAPA was so popular and membership so sought after that

27-466: A year. When needed, there are elections (in August) of a secretary-treasurer and official editor. Other officials have included Official Critics, a Laureate Committee, President, Vice-President, and ballot counters. The first two positions were abandoned by the mid-1940s, and in 2009 the positions of President and Vice-President were also eliminated. The President Emeritus is the author Robert Silverberg , who

36-439: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Fantasy Amateur Press Association Like other APAs, FAPA is primarily an agency for distributing to its members publications published by its members at their own expense. FAPA has "mailings" every three months. Members are required to be active in some way — writing or publishing — and produce at least eight pages of activity

45-607: The November 1938 mailing to fill the 50-member roster. The membership limit was raised to 65 in 1943 and has remained at that level ever since. The early years of FAPA were stormy with party politics and sociological feuds (as recounted in the late Jack Speer 's pioneering fan history, Up to Now ). In 1947, Speer reformed the constitution, and the Insurgents quashed the last inactive OE, Elmer Perdue. Since then official troubles have mostly not disturbed FAPA, and red tape has been held to

54-453: The long wait. By the '70s the waiting list became much smaller, and in more recent years (since the mid 1990s) has disappeared altogether. Additionally, the number of members has also shrunk as existing members died or otherwise dropped off the roster. As of August 2019, there were 17 active participants. FAPA continues to operate in the 21st Century as a connection to fandom's past, and a way for fans to timebind with those who came before. Find

63-546: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title FAPA . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=FAPA&oldid=1099169367 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description

72-516: The waiting list grew to monumental proportions, for a period of time exceeding the number of membership slots on the FAPA roster. A waiting list fee was instituted to cover the cost of sending the Fantasy Amateur to so many fans awaiting membership, and a requirement that waiting listers periodically acknowledge receipt of the Fantasy Amateur was begun in order to weed out those who lost interest during

81-457: Was the last serving President and who has been an active member of FAPA longer than any other current member. When necessary, a teller for the annual officer elections was appointed by the secretary-treasurer. FAPA's original constitutional limit was 50 members to accommodate publishers using hectographs . There were 21 members listed on the roster of the first mailing in August 1937; it took until

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