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Date and Time

17th November, 5:30pm - 7:00pm

Location

Online

Speakers and Artists
  • Tao Leigh Goffe
  • Aasiya Lodhi

Reading the Crisis asks: what kinds of tools and strategies are needed to confront this conjuncture? The online conversation series returns for a third year in an expanded format featuring six in-depth engagements with economics, technology, democracy, migration, culture and climate respectively.

Hosted by senior lecturer and former BBC Radio senior producer Aasiya Lodhi and critic, media theorist and editor of Representology K Biswas, each conversation forms an online teach-in space dedicated to demonstrating how engaging in a conjunctural analysis can enrich artistic practice and deepen organising work and academic study.

The sixth and final conversation of this year’s series takes place on Tuesday 17th November 2026, 5.30pm – 7pm GMT (UK time), with host Aasiya Lodhi joined by Tao Leigh Goffe, author of Dark Laboratory: On Columbus, the Caribbean, and the Origins of the Climate Crisis (2026), for a discussion focusing on climate.

This event will take place online.

Live closed captions will be provided.

Reading the Crisis is produced as part of the Stuart Hall Foundation’s In Search of Common Ground programme, supported by the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, the Hollick Family Foundation, the Paul Hamlyn Foundation and the Power of Pop Fund.

Speakers and Artists

Tao Leigh Goffe

Tao Leigh Goffe, PhD, is the founder and Executive Director of Dark Laboratory and author of a book by the same title published in 2025 by Doubleday. A Black feminist theoretician, she is Associate Professor of cultural history and literary theory with a focus on the environmental humanities and geology at Hunter College, City University of New York (CUNY). She has worked in the past at institutions including Princeton University, Cornell University, Leiden University, New York University, and Johns Hopkins University. Her research is rooted in decolonial thought, literature, and theories of labor that center Black feminism’s engagements with Indigeneity and Asian diasporic racial formations. Dr. Goffe did her undergraduate training at Princeton where she developed a deep passion for molecular biology and dark room photography, which she studied there as well as literature. She earned her doctorate from Yale University.

Aasiya Lodhi

Aasiya Lodhi is a Senior Lecturer in Media at the University of Westminster. Her research is focused on empire and twentieth-century British history. She led an AHRC-funded project on gender, race, and visibility tied to the BBC’s centenary, and she is currently writing a book on BBC Radio, racial liberalism, and the politics of voice in post-war Britain. Aasiya is a former BBC radio producer and journalist.