FANS OUTSIDE ANGLOPARLANTIAfrom Fancyclopedia 2
Impinge only marginally on us, tho the exchange with our fellow
stficionados in Spanish America, France, Germany, and Scandinavia adds that
je ne sais quoi to fannish life. Before the end of World War II all
known stfnists lived in America or the British Empire, except for Gallic
Georges Gallet, Deutschlander Herbert Häusler, and Hungarian Andrew
Lennard. But after the war a tremendous increase in the popularity of
science-fiction in other countries must have occurred; concerning the details
your Plutarch has been unable to make any determinations. The International
SF Society, Erwin Scudla in charge, claims 3000 members and branches in
practically every nation of Western Europe. Some of its affiliates are the SF
Club de Paris, Club Futopia, SF Club Europa, Transgalaxis, Cosmos Club, and
Clube de Literatura Policiaria. Fan life has been discovered in Japan and
Greece and is reported in the Communist Empire. This doesn't count isolated
people scattered from South Africa to the Formosa Straits who are, so to
speak, expatriated members of other national fandoms.
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