The lecture will be held in English and takes place online via zoom. Please
register via email:
transkulturalitaet@uni-ak.ac.atMojisola
Adebayo (Berlin / London) is a playwright, performer, director, producer, workshop facilitator and lecturer at Queen Mary,
University of London. She holds a BA in Drama and Theatre Arts, an MA in Physical Theatre and a PhD in black queer theatre
(Goldsmiths, Royal Holloway and Queen Mary, University of London).
Mojisola
trained extensively with Augusto Boal and is a specialist in Theatre of the Oppressed, working particularly in locations of
conflict and crisis. She has worked in theatre, radio and television, on four continents, over the past 25 years, performing
in over 50 productions, writing, devising and directing over 30 plays, from Antarctica to Zimbabwe. Her own plays are concerned
with climate change, racism, slavery, occupation, homophobia, Islamophobia, gender based violence, state crime and the Black
Lives Matter movement. Publications include Mojisola Adebayo: Plays One and Plays Two (Oberon Books), 48 Minutes for Palestine
in Theatre in Pieces (Methuen), and The Theatre for Development Handbook (co-written with John Martin and Manisha Mehta).
Afriquia Theatre: Black Queer British Plays and Practitioners, co-edited with Lynette Goddard, is out in 2021 (Bloomsbury
Methuen). Her latest play exploring the politics of sexual pleasure, STARS, opens in London in 2021. Mojisola was commissioned
by the National Theatre to write Wind / Rush Generation(s), opening in 2021. She is currently writing Family Tree, which investigates
gynaecology and gardening, historical medical experiments on Black women and soil extraction today. Family Tree is commissioned
by Young Vic and ATC.
Nicole Wolf
Nicole Wolf (Berlin
/ London) is Senior Lecturer in Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths, University of London. Her research, writing, pedagogical and
curatorial projects have concentrated on political cinemas in South Asia and anti-colonial struggles, the co-constitutive
processes and poetics of artistic, activist and movement narratives and more recently on agri/cultural practices and a Cinématics
of the Soil. Her participation in ‘Living Archive – Archive Work as a Contemporary Artistic Practice’ and ‘Archive ausser
sich’ (both projects by Arsenal – Institute for Film and Video Art, Berlin) included research and writing for the restoration
of film works by Yugantar, the first feminist film collective in India (1980-83) as well as the development of “Soil – City-
Solidarity”, an interdisciplinary urban permaculture design course, and the symposium “’Tell me what matter was the ground’
– Repair beyond redemption”. Recent publications are “Is this just a story? Friendships and fictions for speculative alliances.
The Yugantar film collective (1980-83)”, in MIRAJ 7.2. “Fugitive Remains: Soil, Celluloid and Resistant Collectivities”, with
Sheikh, Shela; Ros Gray; Filipa César; Raphaël Grisey, and Bouba Touré. In: Cooking Sections, ed. The Empire Remains Shop.
New York: Columbia Books, 2018. “In the Wake of Gujarat: The Social Relations of Translation and Futurity”. Critical Studies,
4, 2019. pp. 97-113. She is editor of the first book on the audio-visual and literary works of Merle Kroeger and Philip Scheffner,
commissioned by Deutsche Dokumentarfilm Initiative, forthcoming 2021.