Dr. Alison Matthews David, Toxic Textiles (Part 2): Fashion's History of Silent Consent
Fashioncast®
Episode #52, October 8, 2024
Dr. Alison Matthews David, Toxic Textiles (Part 2): Fashion’s History of Silent Consent
This episode is Part 2 of a three-part series on toxic textiles and features Dr. Alison Matthews David, award-winning author, professor at Toronto Metropolitan University, and fashion activist. Dr. Matthew David’s ground-breaking fashion history classic Fashion Victims, will mark its tenth anniversary in 2025 and has become the go to art fashion history text in fashion colleges around the globe.
Tying together over a hundred years of the fashion industry’s indifference to the toxic manufacturing of apparel, Matthews David explains in spell-binding detail the dangers of fashion in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. For example, she highlights damning evidence that the industry was aware of the effects of mercury poisoning in workers for 200 years!
It’s fascinating to listen to Matthews David’s passion about the comparison of toxicity in apparel between the 20th and 21st centuries. Unfortunately, given advances in plastics and the chemicals used to manufacture synthetic textiles, not much has changed--fashion is still one of the most polluting industries on earth.
Matthews David does concede there is a small movement within the industry about the overuse of cheap toxins. Fashion college students seem adamant about making meaningful progress by insisting on the use of non-toxic fabrics in design. Further, a slew of upstart fashion brands is manufacturing non-toxic clothing and making inroads in educating the public and the industry about the real health effects of toxic apparel.
When Matthews David isn’t teaching, researching, and writing, she can be found coordinating collaborations with museums about the history of toxicity in fashion. Currently, she has an exhibit at the Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto, Canada.
While the use of toxic textiles is a grave issue within the fashion industry, understanding the history of the ongoing problem is critical to gain perspective and make future changes. Matthews David exhaustive research methodology and prolific authorship on the topic continues to be a godsend to the industry and will undoubtedly prove to be extremely helpful in solving this menacing problem. Enjoy!
Alison Matthews David | Department of Art History (utoronto.ca)
Fashion Victims: The Dangers of Dress Past and Present https://a.co/d/b8wemri