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Things That Can and Cannot Be Said: The dismantling of the world as we knew it

Watch the Stuart Hall Foundation’s Autumn Keynote event on demand

Price: £3

Author Arundhati Roy gives an evening presentation and discussion at the Stuart Hall Foundation’s Annual Autumn Keynote event.

In the twenty-five years since the release of her world-renowned Booker Prize winning novel, The God of Small Things (1997), Arundhati Roy has consistently interrogated the meaning of justice in all its complexity, social, economic and ecological. Her last novel was The Ministry of Utmost Happiness (2017) which has been translated into more than 40 languages. Her latest collection of essays is Azadi: Freedom, Fascism, and Fiction in the Age of the Virus (2020).

As we endure an unprecedented global pandemic, governmental inaction in response to the climate crisis, and the intensification of authoritarian practices across the global north and south alike, Arundhati Roy was invited by Stuart Hall Foundation to reflect on how we have arrived at this conjuncture and what might come next. Roy discusses the local and global dimensions of these crises and the ongoing resistance to them. Roy is then joined in conversation with Farzana Khan, Executive Director and Co-founder of Healing Justice London, and responds to questions from the audience.

The video contains captions for accessibility. If you would like to watch the event but are unable to afford the £3 cost, please contact info@stuarthallfoundation.org.

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