Does the fashion industry exploit current social
issues for financial gain?
Georgia Hamilton

The fast fashion high street brand Top Shop are known for
quickly keeping up with changing trends, with a recent line of t-shirts
available in store and online feature a ‘girlpower’
slogan. Maxine Bérdat’s 2016 TEDx talk focused around the environmental and
human rights violated by fast fashion outlets such as Top Shop, Bérdat noted
that around 80% of the people working within the apparel industry are women and
98% of them are not receiving a living wage, with 12-year olds posing as 18-year
olds in order to maintain their jobs. when this statement is regarding a brand
which promotes and appears to represent the power within girls the designs
sincerity is weakened and the agenda behind it can be seen as one to profit off
of the idea of girl power through exploiting girls and women rather than it
actually being an issue close to the brands ethos.
Of course, exploiting apparel workers is not new, the
'anti-Gap' campaign initiated by the Labour Co-ordinating Committee of the US
in 1995 was the result of intense struggle and extensive publicity drawing
attention to the child labourers used to produce the cheap but high-quality
cotton shirts we have come to associate with The Gap. In the end The Gap signed
an agreement guaranteeing the protection of human rights to all its employees
along with regular inspection of factories (A. McRobbie) As McRobbie states,
the exploitation was as familiar in 1995 as it is today however it’s as if
consumers and those working within the industry are choosing to ignore where
their clothes come from, wearing a feminist slogan on their t-shirt as if
that’s all they need to do to show they support women, when in fact they’re
worsening the issue.

Body positivity is a movement which is changing the fashion
industry, with a growing number of leading brands using plus size models in
their campaigns, of course it can be seen as a good thing as it’s spreading the
notion of equality and diversity however theirs also room for doubt when it
comes to the intention of brands and whether they’re using the idea of body
positivity as a way to sell more clothing with little interest in the actual
significance of it.


Amy
Odell, editor of Cosmopolitan magazine tweeted “awesome feminist statement at Chanel” in response to the show,
however not all opinions of the show were positive. Lagerfeld who has
previously expressed his opinion that ‘no
one wants to see curvy women’ has been accused of jumping on the feminist
band wagon in order to sell his designs, a move which appears to be happening
all over the fashion world. Ashe raises the argument that men cannot be
feminists because they have no experience of gender oppression and therefore
cannot generate oppositional forms of gender consciousness and identity (F. Ashe) if this is to be applied to
Lagerfeld’s faux protest the protest can be seen as fake in more ways than just
being a creative choice for the fashion show, rather the whole concept behind
it and the messages the placards depict could be seen as false as Ashe suggests
that men cannot be feminists and in result Lagerfeld is feeding in to the act of faking an interest,
passion or even care in relation to social issues, using them as a way to get
‘like- minded’ people to have admiration and want to purchase Chanel.
Social
issues informing trends in fashion isn’t exclusive to today’s society however
the exploitation of it could be argued to be. During the Vietnam war, the
soldiers stationed in Europe and japan wore jeans as a symbol of home, in the
1960’s America’s middle-class college students began wearing them as a way to stand in solidarity with the
working class; those most affected by the war draft. (D.Miller) In this case it’s
not the fashion industry exploiting social and political changes in order to
sell more clothing, it’s the consumers using clothing as a way to project their
social views (similar to today’s society) and the fashion industry profiting
off of this.
It can be questioned whether
the current surge in young people taking an interest and in some cases, being
activists for current social issues such as the Global Justice Now’s youth
network who organised a public protest against Marks and
Spencer for advertising in the Daily Mail (E.Lewis, 2017), encourages fashion retailers
to create products which are designed around these issues in order for them to
sell. Regardless of the motive behind them, the trend in using social issues
which the retailers and designers have no real interest in, in order to sell
clothes is happening. High Street brands are employing women and girls, in
sub-standard conditions to make feminist slogan t-shirts, profiting off of the
social issues they want people to believe they are fighting for when they are
in fact they’re doing the opposite.
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