
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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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.
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.
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.


















