Key Takeaway:


The fashion industry could not exist without storytelling. Compelling and aspirational stories conveyed through catwalks, campaigns and social media are the stuff that make garments fashionable, fostering a strong desire to be seen wearing them.

Fashionโ€™s stories can spread positive messaging about issues that affect us all. In 2020, Stella McCartneyโ€™s Paris show featured models wearing cartoonish animal costumes. This humorous stunt emphasised a serious point about the โ€œplanet-friendlyโ€ brandโ€™s pledge not to use leather, fur, skins, feathers or animal glues.

But more often, the darker, more unpalatable truth is that fashionโ€™s storytelling drives overconsumption. And it defines unrealistic beauty expectations that exclude many by perpetuating western standards about what is normal and acceptable.

As a cultural historian who researches fashion, I believe the industry has to do better to effect change, and this can be achieved through stronger, more inclusive and responsible storytelling. 

Fashion and world problems

According to recent fashion industry reports, storytelling is becoming more prominent as brands seek to demonstrate their social responsibility by forging deeper relationships with consumers. The increased significance of storytelling within fashion can be linked to two themes that have defined social and political debate about the worldโ€™s post-COVID recovery: self and society.

Consumers want more meaningful experiences that enable them to explore their identities and connect with others. Fashion is the ideal medium for this, especially during a time of social and political unease. The industryโ€™s global reach means that visual cues and messaging conveyed through clothing campaigns can be easily shared and understood.

The Business of Fashionโ€™s report, The State of Fashion 2024, links the increased importance of storytelling to consumers being โ€œmore demanding when it comes to authenticity and relatabilityโ€. People want to buy brands that share and support their values.

The consumer group most concerned to align their lifestyle choices and beliefs with the companies that clothe them is Gen-Z โ€“ people born between 1996 and 2010 โ€“ who โ€œvalue pursuing their own unique identities and appreciate diversityโ€. 

The increasing prominence of storytelling in fashion is also linked to the industryโ€™s global sway and corresponding social responsibility. Organisations like the UN are increasingly clearthat the fashion industry will only help tackle the global challenges emphasised by COVID if it uses its influence to change consumersโ€™ mindsets.

The uneven social impact of the pandemic, which emphasised longstanding inequalities, provided a wake-up call to take action on many global problems, including climate change, overconsumption and racial discrimination. This makes the fashion industry, which contributes 2% to global GDP, a culprit but also a potential champion for driving change. 

The British Fashion Councilโ€™s Fashion Diversity Equality & Inclusion Report, published in January 2024, highlights โ€œfashionโ€™s colossal power to influence, to provide cultural reference and guide social trendsโ€. Similarly, the UNโ€™s Fashion Communication Playbook, published last year, urges the industry to use its โ€œcultural reach, powers of persuasion and educational role to both raise awareness and drive a shift towards a more sustainable and equitable industryโ€.

To do this, the UNโ€™s report urges storytellers, imagemakers and role models to change the narrative of the fashion industry. They are asked to educate consumers and inspire them to alter their behaviour if it can help create positive change. 

Fashionโ€™s new stories

Since the pandemic, there is evidence the fashion industry has begun to change the content and form of the stories it tells, chiefly by putting a human face on current global challenges. Large-scale, entrenched social problems are being explored through real-life stories. This can help people to understand the problems that confront them, and grasp their role in working towards overcoming them.

One example is Nikeโ€™s Move to Zero campaign, a global sustainability initiative which launched during the pandemic in 2020. Instead of endless statistics and apocalyptic warnings about crisis-point climate emergency, Nike encourages people to โ€œrefreshโ€ sports gear with maintenance and repair. Old Nike products that have been recreated by designers are sold through pop-ups. When salvage is not possible, Nike provides ways for people to recycle and donate old products.

By encouraging relatively small changes that align the lifecycle of a product with consumersโ€™ everyday lives, Nikeโ€™s campaign challenges the traditional idea of clothes being new, immediate and ultimately disposable by making change aspirational. 

Narrative hang-ups

While some fashion brands are rethinking the stories they tell, my recent book, Hang-Ups: Reflections on the Causes and Consequences of Fashionโ€™s Western Centrism, explains that some of fashionโ€™s most powerful and harmful stories are deep-rooted.

Concepts defined during the 18th and 19th centuries โ€“ civilisation, anthropology, sexology โ€“ still influence how the fashion industry engages with age, gender, race and sex. Its drive for newness and the way it pushes the idea that purchasing expensive brands brings automatic status is also based on traditional western social values that fit poorly with 21st-century perspectives and priorities.

The persistence of centuries-old attitudes is apparent too in Nikeโ€™s Move to Zero campaign, however well-intentioned. While the initiative is clearly conceived to influence consumer behaviour in a positive way, it still doesnโ€™t fundamentally address what the fashion industry is and does. But at the very least, it accepts that fashion functions through high consumption and the sense of status that owning and wearing a brand confers.

Throwing everything out

One of the key points I make in my book is that effective change will be more likely if we understand how the industry developed into what it is today. This calls for more audacious storytelling that critiques notions of normality, acceptability and inclusivity.

One example is Swedish brand Avavav, which commits itself to โ€œcreative freedom driven by humour, entertainment and design evolutionโ€. In February 2024, the brandโ€™s Milan catwalk showconcluded with models being pelted with litter. This experimental performance explored prevailing social media stories by calling out online trolls and highlighting the hurt of hate speech, within and beyond the fashion industry.

Naturally, it caused a sensation and was widely covered in the media. A stunt perhaps, but it got people talking and drew attention to designer Beate Karlssonโ€™s message about online hate. Clearly, compelling and innovative storytelling has the power to change minds and behaviour.

Contributor

Recently Published

Key Takeaway: Concerns about AI’s potential roguehood and potential harm to privacy and dignity are a significant concern. AI’s algorithms, programmed by humans, are also biased and discriminatory. However, a psychologist’s research suggests that AI is a threat to making people less disciplined and skilled in making thoughtful decisions. Making thoughtful decisions involves understanding the […]

Top Picks

Key Takeaway: A study has found that humble leaders can become more promotable by growing others through a “humility route”. Human capital theory suggests that employees’ value can be enhanced by investing in their knowledge, skills, and abilities. Humble leaders focus on the learning and growth of their followers, creating human capital value for themselves. […]
Key Takeaway: Leading scientists and technologists often make terrible predictions about the direction of innovation, leading to misalignments between a company’s economic incentives to profit from its proprietary AI model and society’s interests in how the AI model should be monetised and deployed. Focusing on the economic risks from AI is not just about preventing […]

Trending

I highly recommend reading the McKinsey Global Instituteโ€™s new report, โ€œReskilling China: Transforming The Worldโ€™s Largest Workforce Into Lifelong Learnersโ€, which focuses on the countryโ€™s biggest employment challenge, re-training its workforce and the adoption of practices such as lifelong learning to address the growing digital transformation of its productive fabric. How to transform the country […]

Join our Newsletter

Get our monthly recap with the latest news, articles and resources.

Login

Welcome to Empirics

We are glad you have decided to join our mission of gathering the collective knowledge of Asia!
Join Empirics