[Ads-l] Antedating of "Trekkie"

Jeff Prucher 000000b93183dc86-dmarc-request at LISTSERV.UGA.EDU
Fri Feb 1 03:00:53 UTC 2019


That's a great find, Fred! Fanzines are enormously difficult to research, so this is a great lead. If fanlore.org is correct, I wonder if this might help explain why the term "Trekkie" has been so scorned by many Trek fans.

The other "Trekkie" origin story that I haven't been able to pin down is an apparent interview between Art Saha (SF editor and former Futurian) and Pete Hamill for TV Guide, allegedly in 1967, but despite many assertions of this on the Interwebs and at least one of his obituaries, I haven't been able to find any actual evidence of this interview ever having been published (although it's been a few years since I last looked).
Jeff    On Thursday, January 31, 2019, 4:05:49 AM PST, Shapiro, Fred <fred.shapiro at YALE.EDU> wrote:  
 
 The OED's first use for the term "Trekkie" meaning a fan of "Star Trek" is dated 1970.  One or more citations from 1969 are discussed in the following excerpt from the website fanlore.org:


The Awful Offal is a 4-page essay by David Gerrold<https://fanlore.org/wiki/David_Gerrold>.

Accompanying it is an illustration of Kirk and Spock created by Jerry Mayes. Another illo, a horribly racist cartoon by Maynes accompanies the essay on the last page. This illo does not appear to be directly related to the essay and is simply embedded random filler.

The essay was printed in the science fiction zine "Trumpet" #9 in 1969. A similar 1968 essay, one by Harlan Ellison<https://fanlore.org/wiki/Harlan_Ellison>, is The Words in Spock's Mouth<https://fanlore.org/wiki/The_Words_in_Spock%27s_Mouth>.

Gerrold's essay starts with the provocative statement that "with the exception of Lord of the Rings<https://fanlore.org/wiki/Lord_of_the_Rings>, Star Trek<https://fanlore.org/wiki/Star_Trek> is undoubtedly the worst thing that has ever happened to Science Fiction (note the capitals).... [snipped] But lest, at some future con I be quoted out of context and get punched in the nose, or ostracized, or worse, I now reserve the right to elucidate upon the very definitely opening sentence of this essay."

Gerrold makes much of the differences between "science fiction" and "Science Fiction," and how uneducated, undisciplined fans of Lord of the Rings and Star Trek are ruining almost EVERYTHING.

He also employs the term "trekkees," a very early use of this label. Replies to his essay in the next issue of "Trumpet" spell it "trekkies<https://fanlore.org/wiki/Trekkie_(glossary_term)>." It is unclear if the spelling Gerrold used was a consistent typo by the editor, or Gerrold's choice of words, and if it was the latter, was the double "ee" used because the term hadn't been standardized, ignorance, or something else?


Fred Shapiro

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The American Dialect Society - http://www.americandialect.org


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