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Nonprofit fanfiction database Archive of Our Own wins a Hugo

The award is a major win for fanfic writers.

Photo of Michelle Jaworski

Michelle Jaworski

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Archive of Our Own (AO3), the fan-run, nonprofit website that’s home to more than 5 million transformative works like fanfiction, fanart, and podfics, won one of science fiction’s most prestigious awards at Worldcon Sunday night.

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The website (which is part of the Organization of Transformative Works) won the Hugo for best related works, a widespread category that sometimes encompasses making-of books, pieces of criticism, and biographies. Fellow nominees included a book on Ursula K. Le Guin’s writing, a Hugo Award retrospective, a website that campaigned to sponsor Worldcon memberships for Mexican creators, and Lindsay Ellis’ video series on The Hobbit.

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Even before AO3’s win, the very fact that it was nominated for a Hugo was seen as a win by many fanfic writers and readers. Fanfiction has been historically derided or not seen as a legitimate way of exploring a fandom. It’s also an avenue of exploring fandom that’s often dominated by women and LGBTQ creators. (AO3 was originally founded after corporations attempted to exploit writers and monetize fanfiction.)

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The very existence of AO3’s nomination was a way of legitimizing fanfiction as a form of expression. But its win validates it even further, particularly in the science-fiction and fantasy community, which has long been seen as a male-dominant field—even though women have largely dominated the Hugo Awards (including this year).

But the site’s win isn’t something that can be boiled down to a handful of names, as co-founder Naomi Novik (who accepted the award on AO3’s behalf) indicated in her acceptance speech.

“We’re up here accepting, but only on behalf of literally thousands of volunteers and millions of users, all of whom have come together and built this thriving home for fandom, a nonprofit and non-commercial community space built entirely by volunteer labor and user donations, on the principle that we needed a place of our own that was not out to exploit its users but to serve them,” Novik said in an acceptance speech that was later posted online.

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According to Novik, AO3’s Hugo Award will be included as part of Worldcon’s traveling exhibition “because it belongs to all of us.”

At the end of her speech, Novik asked that anyone in the audience who felt like they belonged to the AO3 community to stand up. Much of the audience, which included fellow Hugo-nominated creators, did.

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Fanfic writers have been taking the win in stride, with some of them pointing out that because AO3 had won a Hugo, it meant that they were all Hugo Award-winning writers.

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You can check out the entire list of Hugo winners here.

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The Daily Dot