It Could Happen Here

CZM Book Club: The Comet, by W.E.B. Du Bois

Mar 1, 2026
A 1920 Afrofuturist apocalyptic short story is read aloud, following a lone Black messenger's discovery of a deserted New York. Streets, silent buildings, and a surreal cityscape set a tense, uncanny mood. Encounters across racial and social divides and a sudden cosmic return expose shifting roles and societal reactions. A closing discussion teases themes of apocalypse, Edenic imagery, and race.
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INSIGHT

Du Bois Used Fiction To Explore Social Theory

  • W. E. B. Du Bois wrote The Comet in 1920 as fiction to explore ideas his nonfiction couldn't, blending sociological critique with apocalyptic narrative.
  • Margaret Kiljoy frames Du Bois as a sociologist and civil-rights leader using apocalypse to examine race, class, and rebirth.
INSIGHT

Apocalypse Reveals Social Geography

  • The story opens with Jim, a Black messenger, discovering a sealed vault and then the city emptied by a comet's deadly gas, foregrounding isolation and classed spaces.
  • Du Bois uses Wall Street vaults, subway basements, and Madison Square to contrast Jim's marginal social position with civic centers now empty.
ANECDOTE

Jim And Julia Form An Adam And Eve Pair

  • After the comet Jim rescues a white woman photographer, and they search the empty city together, creating an intimate, provisional bond across racial and class lines.
  • Margaret reads Du Bois's scenes of the pair driving to Harlem, visiting the telephone exchange, and riding to rooftops to signal for help.
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