Dark Laboratory: On Columbus, the Caribbean, and the Origins of the Climate Crisis
By (Author) Dr Tao Leigh Goffe
Penguin Books Ltd
Hamish Hamilton Ltd
8th July 2025
6th March 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Colonialism and imperialism
Climate change
Memoirs
Social impact of environmental issues
Slavery and abolition of slavery
Ethnic groups and multicultural studies
304.28098611
Hardback
384
Width 160mm, Height 240mm, Spine 34mm
592g
From award-winning writer and theorist Tao Leigh Goffe, an urgent investigation into the intertwined history of colonialism and the climate crisis - and the lessons we can learn to fight for a better world. Our planet is on the precipice of dramatic ecological breakdown and climate despair is at an all-time high. But there are many communities who have survived beyond the environmental destruction wrought on them by colonialism - and they hold the solutions for climate repair. Using the Caribbean as a case study, Tao Leigh Goffe traces the vibrant and complex history of the islands back to 1492 and the arrival of Christopher Columbus when the Caribbean became the subject of Western exploitation. Charting the human and ecological forces that have shaped the islands, Goffe examines the legacy of fierce warrior Queen Nanny of the Maroons, engages in pressing cultural debate about stolen artefacts and human remains which are kept hidden in museum archives, and visits Indigenous farming cooperatives who are using ancestral knowledge to rebuild their communities. Using the Caribbean as a both a warning and a guide, Dark Laboratory takes hopeful and galvanizing teachings from the islands communities to offer illuminating solutions to the ecological crisis. From guano to sugarcane, coral bleaching to invasive mongoose populations, Dark Laboratory is a lyrical, vibrant and urgent investigation into the greatest threat facing humanity.
A necessary, much needed cri de coeur, a thoroughly compelling book about the climate crisis and the Caribbean region. Dark Laboratory is utterly unique to read; it is punch the air, punch in the gut, heart palpitations thrilling. Goffe isn't just a scholar of the current climate emergency but a poet and a feminist who joins the dots . . . Every page is mixed with heart and conviction. Mandatory reading on climate and the Caribbean region -- Monique Roffey, author of 'The Mermaid of Black Conch'
Hugely important . . . A truly illuminating book that joins the dots on the ideologies and realities that underpin our world, written with clarity, passion, insight and a frequently beautiful poetic turn of phrase. Essential reading for anyone with a curiosity over the true shape of global structures, and the intersections of identity, colonialism, capitalism and the climate crisis -- Jeffrey Boakye, author of 'Black, Listed'
A work of searching curiosity and intelligence that traces the connections between colonial power, racial violence and the perilous state of our planet today, while also sketching a path to a more liveable, less unequal future. It is a necessary book and an important one -- Ekow Eshun, author of 'The Strangers: Five Extraordinary Black Men and the Worlds That Made Them'
Nimble and prophesying, truthful and rigorous, Professor Tao Leigh Goffe roots the climate crisis to its true origins - the exploitation of people of colour - without hyperbole or lambast. This is the way it is. In having the knowledge, determination and simple intent to go where others have not, Dark Laboratory is a benchmark, both for experts within the climate struggle, and those wishing to know more. A vital, compelling and nuanced addition to the most pressing debate of modern times -- Courttia Newland, author of 'A River Called Time'
A powerful and tender and inspiring journey through time, landscapes and ideas that shape our understanding of the origins of climate breakdown and futures we can and must realise -- Joycelyn Longdon, founder of ClimateinColour
This timely book illuminates the connections between colonization and climate change by providing poignant real-world examples which expose the historically illiterate thinking of powerful nations on this topic -- Corinne Fowler, author of 'Our Island Stories: Country Walks Through Colonial Britain'
A fantastic, galvanising read. A clarion call on climate issues through a Caribbean lens -- Irenosen Okojie, author of 'Nudibranch'
Goffe offers a compelling treatise for our time . . . This is a book that will expand the conventional wisdoms and vocabularies and reset our imaginary. It journeys across a vast territory of mobilities and ecologies, engaging with a range of indigenous knowledges in a stimulating and at times personal post-colonial account that communicates joy and optimism -- Charlotte Williams, author of 'Sugar and Slate'
As well as being a very important addition to the dialogue on slavery and reparations, this is a very enlightening new look at climate change . . . Presenting the Dark Laboratory wherein the effects of the resulting changes of climate, race and technology are studied, Tao Leigh Goffe invites us to save the planet from the climate crisis by divesting from the economies that have caused it and were designed to kill us, advising that we must question our Western assumptions and chart new strategies for how to live after climate crisis -- Barbara Blake Hannah, author of 'Growing Out: Black Hair and Black Pride in the Swinging 60s'
An illuminating and vital redress of the climate crisis . . . Im desperately glad that scholars like Tao are doing this crucial work -- Paula Akpan, author of 'When We Ruled: The Rise and Fall of Twelve African Queens and Warriors'
Tao Leigh Goffe is an award-winning writer, theorist, and interdisciplinary artist who grew up between London and New York. She is Associate Professor at the City University of New York and the founder of Dark Laboratory, a climate research organization which focuses on the study of race, technology and ecology. Tao lives and works in Manhattan. Dark Laboratory is her first book.