Lola Olufemi (/ɒluˈfɛmi/; born 1996) is a British writer.[1][2][3] She is an organiser with the London Feminist Library,[4] and her writing has been published in many national and international magazines and newspapers. She is the author of Experiments in Imagining Otherwise and Feminism, Interrupted: Disrupting Power,[5] and the co-editor of A FLY Girl's Guide to University: Being a Woman of Colour at Cambridge and Other Institutions of Power and Elitism.
Olufemi has written and spoken on a range of topics including: art and culture;[12][13] feminism, gender and sexism (including the Women's Strike and Time's Up movements);[14][15][16] food equality;[17]climate justice and race;[18] race and racism, including archives of radical Black British activism;[19] and higher education issues, including institutional justice and sexual harassment in universities,[7][20] and decolonising practices in higher education[21][22] (for which she was targeted with a "vicious and misleading"[23] sexist and racist harassment by British right-wing press).[24][8][25]
Poet Jay Bernard interviewed Olufemi for Housmans Bookshop, and the pair discussed the "internationalist ethos of black feminist movements in the 70s and 80s", connecting feminist struggles such as protests against sexual violence with opposition to settler colonialism.[26]
Olufemi with Che Gossett and Sarah Shin organised a month-long programme of talks and events under the title "Revolution is not a one-time event" in summer 2020. The launch event, hosted by Silver Press on 9 June 2020, took the form of a fundraiser for Black liberation. The fundraiser was hosted by Akwugo Emejulu and featured Che Gossett, Helena Rubinstein, Ru Kaur, Olufemi and Amrit Wilson in conversation.[27]
Art
Olufemi is a member of "bare minimum", an interdisciplinary, anti-work arts collective.[1] She has been commissioned by Tate Modern to run a feminist workshop as part of a Feminist Library event.[28]
A FLY Girl's Guide to University: Being a Woman of Colour at Cambridge and Other Institutions of Power and Elitism (Verve Poetry Press, 2019), edited with Odelia Younge, Waithera Sebatindira, and Suhaiymah Manzoor-Khan.[33]
Feminism, Interrupted: Disrupting Power (Pluto Press, 2020).
Red, shortlisted for the 2020 Queen Mary Wasafiri New Writing Prize in the Fiction category.[34]
Experiments in Imagining Otherwise (Hajar Press, 2021).