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Jerry C. Zee discusses his New Book: Continent in Dust

  • Penn Museum Academic Wing Room 345 3260 South Street Philadelphia, PA, 19104 United States (map)

In China, the weather has changed. Decades of reform have been shadowed by a changing meteorological normal: seasonal dust storms and spectacular episodes of air pollution have reworked physical and political relations between land and air in China and downwind.

Continent in Dust offers an anthropology of strange weather, focusing on intersections among statecraft, landscape, atmosphere, and society. Traveling from state engineering programs that attempt to choreograph the movement of mobile dunes in the interior, to newly reconfigured bodies and airspaces in Beijing, and beyond, this book explores contemporary China as a weather system in the making: what would it mean to understand “the rise of China” literally, as the country itself rises into the air?

Jerry Zee is jointly appointed Assistant Professor in the Department Anthropology and the High Meadows Environmental Institute at Princeton University. Zee is a sociocultural anthropologist whose researchexplores geophysical and environmental emergence as sites ofpolitical experiment. His work is situated at the intersections of feminist science and technology studies, environmental humanities, and experimental ethnography. He considers the rise of China as a matter of geophysical and geopolitical entanglement, moving across weather systems that connect inland land degradation, major dust storm formation, and the eventual scattering of Chinese land as meteorological fallout across the Northern Hemisphere.

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December 3

Laura Ogden discusses her new book: Loss and Wonder at the World’s End

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March 18

“All Models are Wrong, but How Wrong Can we Let Them Be?”, A Talk by Prof. Kathleen Morrison