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[Commlist] Fashion Highlight -Issue 4- Call for papers (2024): Fashion’s fibres, as planetary flows
Fri Jul 05 06:22:27 GMT 2024
Fashion Highlight -Issue 4- Call for papers (2024): FASHION’S FIBRES
AS PLANETARY FLOWS
Guest Editors: Alice Payne and Anneke Smelik
Fibre, the basis of fashion’s materiality, is experiencing rising demand
year on year, reflecting the insatiable desire for ‘more’ that defines
the dominant fashion system. With an annual consumption of 116 million
tonnes in 2022, close to a doubling in 20 years (Textile Exchange 2023),
humanity’s appetite for fibre has never been more voracious.
Recent studies on fashion’s fibre are diverse: including comparative
analyses of different fibres’ sustainability benefits or challenges,
analysis of their material flows, value chains (Mellick et. al 2021) and
cultural histories (Smelik 2023). In industry contexts there are calls
for fibre to be traceable from all sources – whether from forests, oil
fields, farms, or laboratories – and their impacts to be quantified and
reduced (e.g., UNECE 2021; Changing Markets 2022).
This Call for Papers proposes a planetary perspective on fibre, one in
which fibre is viewed as material flows and forces on and of both human
and non-human, the living and the technological, and the crowded
continuum between them. Following Morton (2013), fibres such as
polyester may be seen as ‘hyperobjects’: objects so vast, so
planet-wrapping in their spatial impact and so long in their temporal
lifespan (from ancient fossil fuel origins to eventual
photo-degradation), that they resist comprehension.
Viewed through a planetary lens, fibres are unruly: no corner of the
earth is free of microfibres, they persist in air, water and soil,
coagulate in oceans. Fibres can be living technologies, in the case of
genetically modified cotton plants, or blended combinations of
biological and synthetic matter in stubborn melanges that resist easy
separation.
Fibres are traded: they are commodities hedged on the futures markets,
travelling through global value chains and across national borders.
Fibres are branded as products. As sustainability credentials continue
to be fiercely contested, the eco-labels associated with varieties of
cotton or wool (whether certified as ‘responsible’, ‘organic’, or
‘regenerative’) can command a premium.
A posthuman (Braidotti 2016) perspective on fibre recognises the
vitality of fibres, or as a ‘world of active materials’ as Ingold puts
it (2013), as well as the politics, power dynamics, exchanges and agency
of the many kinds of humans, non-humans, more-than-humans that together
create fibre as matter. This Call for Papers proposes that a posthuman
perspective can support analysis of the dynamics, ethics and materiality
of fibre at a planetary scale. This Call for Papers invites reflections,
provocations, and speculations on fashion's future, focusing on the tiny
strands of fibre that are aggregated by the tonne, traded as
commodities, spun into yarns, branded as products, and wrestled over in
the marketplace.
We invite papers on individual fibre stories of all forms, from viscose,
cotton, wool, silk, polyester, nylon and beyond, on the role of fibre in
a circular economy, the governance of fibre, the ethics of fibre, the
cultural histories of new and old fibre technologies, fibre and place,
and provocations on fibre’s agency and materiality. This call aims to
stimulate a dialogue about fibre as the fundamental element of fashion,
shaping its present and future.
REFERENCES
Braidotti, R. (2016). Posthuman critical theory. Critical posthumanism
and planetary futures, 13-32.
Changing Markets Foundation. (2022). Synthetics Anonymous 2.0: Fashion’s
persistent plastic problem.
https://changingmarkets.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/Synthetics-Anonymous-2-online-reports-layout.pdf
Ingold, T. (2013). Making: Anthropology, archaeology, art and
architecture. Routledge.
Mellick, Z., Payne, A., & Buys, L. (2021). From Fibre to Fashion:
Understanding the Value of Sustainability in Global Cotton Textile and
Apparel Value Chains. Sustainability, 13(22), 12681.
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/22/12681.
Morton, T. (2013). Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of
the World. U of Minnesota Press.
Smelik, A. (2023). Polyester: A Cultural History. Fashion Practice,
15(2), 279–299. https://doi.org/10.1080/17569370.2023.2196158
Textile Exchange. (2023). Materials Market Report 2023.
https://textileexchange.org/app/uploads/2023/11/Materials-Market-Report-2023.pdf
UNECE. (2021). Policy brief – Harnessing the potential of blockchain
technology for due diligence and sustainability in cotton value chains.
https://unece.org/sites/default/files/2021-04/ECE_TRADE_C_CEFACT_2021_12E-TextilePolicyBrief_0.pdf
ABOUT THE GUEST EDITORS
Dr Alice Payne is a Professor and Dean of the School of Fashion and
Textiles at RMIT. Her research focuses on environmental and social
sustainability issues throughout the life cycle of clothing. Recent work
has examined labour issues in the cotton value chain, as well as
technologies to address the problem of textile waste. She is author of
the book Designing Fashion’s Future, co-editor of Global Perspectives on
Sustainable Fashion, and is an award-winning designer and educator.
Professor emerita Anneke Smelik was Professor of Visual Culture and
Fashion Studies till 2023, in the Department of Cultural Studies at the
Radboud University of Nijmegen (Netherlands). After years of research on
visual media such as film, television and videoclips, she has shifted
her focus to fashion studies and the creative industries. In 2018-19
Anneke Smelik was a Fellow at the Netherlands Institute for Advanced
Study in Amsterdam. She is co-editor of Critical Studies in Fashion &
Beauty.
INSTRUCTION FOR THE AUTHORS
We welcome full papers in English with a range length of 3000-4000
words, footnotes and bibliographical references excluded. It is highly
recommended to use the template and APA STYLE as a formatting guideline.
No article processing charge is required.
The deadline for submitting the full paper (saved in .doc or .docx
format) via the platform is the 31 August 2024. The issue 4 will be
published in December 2024.
You can download the CFP and submit your proposal here:
https://riviste.fupress.net/index.php/fh/announcement/view/72
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