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Big Dead Place

Inside the Strange & Menacing World of Antarctica

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About this listen

When Johnson went to work for the US Antarctic Program (devoted to scientific research and education in support of the national interest in the Antarctic), he figured he'd find adventure, beauty, penguins, and lofty-minded scientists. Instead he found boredom, alcohol, and bureaucracy.

As a dishwasher and garbage man at McMurdo Station, Johnson quickly shed his illusions about Antarctica. Since he and his coworkers seldom ventured beyond the station's grim, functional buildings, they spent most of their time finding ways to entertain themselves, drinking beer, bowling, and making home movies. The dormlike atmosphere, complete with sexual hijinks and obscene costume parties, sometimes made life there feel like "a cheap knock-off of some original meaty experience".

What dangers there were existed mostly in the psychological realm; most people who were there through the winter developed the "Antarctica stare", an unnerving tendency to forget what they were saying midsentence and gaze dumbly at the station walls. And if the cold and isolation didn't drive one crazy, the petty hatreds and mindless red tape might. Though occasionally rambling and uneven, this memoir offers an insider's look at a place that few people know anything about and fewer still have ever seen.

©2005 Nicholas Johnson (P)2016 Audible, Inc.
Anthropology Expeditions & Discoveries Organisational Behavior Polar Regions Politics & Government Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Social Sciences World

Critic reviews

"Johnson's savagely funny [book] is a grunt's-eye view of fear and loathing, arrogance and insanity in a dysfunctional, dystopian closed community. It's like M*A*S*H on ice, a bleak, black comedy." ( The Times of London)
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This is amazingly well portrayed, as someone who spent time on the British Antarctic Survey it's interesting to see that USAP is similar to us but dialed up to 11. Although this may just be because this was written a decade ish before I went down. Hard graft and dealing with frozen excrement and urine, a lot of planes and the occasional penguin, was certainly my experience. Also the humorous approach to station life and the bureaucracy, is so well put it should be a recommended approach for anyone working in Antarctica.

Very accurate

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