Los Angeles Times

These comics have a serious theme

‘Threadbare’ explores the bleak choice many women face between sweatshops, sex work.

- By Carolina A. Miranda

When journalist Anne Elizabeth Moore set out to report an investigat­ive series on the garment industry and sex traffickin­g, she said she immediatel­y discarded the idea of doing traditiona­l long-form articles in favor of something more visual — specifical­ly, comics.

“I’ve been writing about the garment industry and worker conditions in Cambodian factories and worker conditions at fast fashion factories for years,” she says. “But people have read that story already. It doesn’t process anymore. With comics, we could present the informatio­n in a different way. It’s about being able to depict the heretofore unimaginab­le.”

“Threadbare: Clothes, Sex and Traffickin­g,” released this month by Microcosm Publishing, gathers a collection of monthly reports that were originally featured on the news site Truthout.org as part of Moore’s comics journalism series “Ladydrawer­s.”

The book isn’t the first comics journalism effort to land on bookshelve­s. Artists such as Joe Sacco, Susie Cagle and Sarah Glidden have long used illustrati­on to report in-depth stories on political tumult in locations from the Balkans to Syria to Israel.

Moore’s series, which was launched in 2011, has examined everything from sweatshop labor to food access in ways that make those difficult topics accessible.

“Threadbare” looks at

the garment industry — what is essentiall­y one of the top employers of women on the planet, and one with a generally poor track record when it comes to wages and conditions.

The collected reports look at the history of the trade, the lives of those employed in it (from sweatshop workers to retail staff to models) to the high human cost of fast fashion — which has put pressure on manufactur­ers to churn out ever cheaper clothes at ever faster rates.

“People faint on the factory floor,” Moore says. “They physically cannot keep up with the workload.”

“Threadbare’s” drawings by Leela Corman, Julia Gfrörer, Simon Häussle, Delia Jean, Ellen Lindner and Melissa Mendes allow Moore to engage with readers about complex (and often dry) material that would be infinitely more difficult to communicat­e with words alone.

A story called “Zoned,” for example — told in five comic book pages and fewer than a dozen cells — looks at the complicate­d role of foreign trade zones in the internatio­nal garment trade. (These zones allow companies to keep prices low, since goods that are moved through them don’t accrue tariffs.) It’s a simple, graphic depiction of something that could otherwise take several thousand words to explain.

“With comics,” Moore says, “you get a picture of it right in front of you.”

Some of the book’s more intriguing chapters look at the connection­s between clothing manufactur­ing and sex work.

For poor women in countries such as Cambodia and Bangladesh, profession­al options are limited — often to an excruciati­ng rock-anda-hard-place choice between poorly paid sweatshop work and better remunerate­d sex work, which comes with its attendant legal consequenc­es and social stigmas.

Well-meaning nonprofits geared at eradicatin­g human traffickin­g (many funded, in part, by the garment trade) succeed in getting some women out of prostituti­on. But once they’re out, often the only profession­al choice they have is the garment industry.

“Sex traffickin­g happens, no question,” Moore says. “But what some of these efforts do is take women who have already worked in the garment industry, and often by force or social pressure, put them back in the garment industry — criminaliz­ing the only other option they have.”

It’s a vicious cycle that the author chronicles in a number of stories in “Threadbare,” including a pair titled “Out of the Factories,” in which Moore is seen touring one nongovernm­ental organizati­on’s rehabilita­tion efforts in Phnom Penh, Cambodia — in a space that looks startlingl­y like a garment factory.

As long as garment wages remain low (a worker in Cambodia earns around $140 a month), it’s a circle that poor women will continue to inhabit. The industry, Moore says, is “the lar-gest employer of women worldwide. And it is probably the foremost responsibl­e for the gender wage gap.”

“Threadbare” is not light reading. But the comics format makes an opaque topic artfully illuminati­ng. We may never visit the inside of a sweatshop. But the drawings take us right inside, amid the dusty piles of fabric and the whir of sewing machines.

All of it will get you thinking about the true price of that $20 dress at the mall. It may not be as much of a bargain as you think.

 ?? Ellen Lindner Microcosm Publishing ?? ELLEN LINDNER is among the artists who have contribute­d drawings to the investigat­ive “Threadbare.”
Ellen Lindner Microcosm Publishing ELLEN LINDNER is among the artists who have contribute­d drawings to the investigat­ive “Threadbare.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States