Sustainable Fashion, Migrants, Embroidery: Ateliers of 'Social Integration'
By (Author) Dr Alessandra Lopez y Royo
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
5th September 2024
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Refugees and political asylum
Fashion and beauty industries
Fashion and textile design
Sustainability
746.44
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Sustainable Fashion, Migrants, Embroidery: Ateliers of 'Social Integration' tells of community-led solidarity ateliers engaged in sewing and embroidery activities which, in the Global North and Global South, are providing a vital alternative to neoliberal and neo-colonial fashion paradigms. On encountering several ateliers solidaires/sartorie sociali during her immersive fieldwork, for which she travelled to Morocco, Southern Italy, and Turkey, and contrasting her findings with her knowledge of parallel and analogous initiatives in London, Alessandra Lopez y Royo suggests that despite their different outlook and approach these ateliers can be inscribed within an ever-growing economy of solidarity and sharing. With a uniquely combined focus on sustainability, fashion and migration, Lopez y Royo examines how the ateliers foreground a powerful social inclusion agenda, encouraging migrants (and refugees) to collaborate, exchange knowledge, and foster communities on a level playing field with locals. Questioning widely accepted notions of empowerment and social integration, and drawing on her background in archaeology and material culture studies, Lopez y Royo uses micro-studies to illuminate a broader path to a more inclusive, sustainable, and socially conscious industry, presenting a fresh perspective on repurposing and upcycling. In a world grappling with the need to shift away from fast fashion's wasteful practices, this thought-provoking exploration shows how slow-growth solidarity ateliers can challenge the widely accepted notions of both fashion and social integration.
Alessandra Lopez y Royo (aka Alex Bruni) is a former university Reader with a PhD in Art History and Archaeology from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS,) University of London. An activist committed to a diverse, inclusive and sustainable fashion, Alessandra has blogged and written for magazines and journals, and occasionally models. She is the author of Contemporary Indonesian Fashion: Through the Looking Glass (2019), the only English-language in-depth analysis of the fashion system in Indonesia, also published in this Bloomsbury series. Twitter: @alexb244 Instagram/Threads: @alexb244