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Fabric, Dyes, Glamour, and International Affairs, with Virginia Postrel
Author and speaker Virginia Postrel has spent many years researching and writing about, among other things, various aspects of the economics and societal context of fashion, glamour, and consumer choice. A few years ago her book The Fabric of Civilization tackled the history and global effects of fabric-making, dyeing, the clothing trade, and other textile-related activities. So when host David Priess had his curiosity piqued by some displays at the International Spy Museum related to silk, dyes, and espionage, he knew who to call.
David talked to Virginia about the origins of string and of fabric, togas in fiction and reality, the value of purple in the Roman Empire, the importance of fabrics for outfitting armies and making warships' sails, the development of weaving, how textile merchants led to the modern political economy, Jakob Fugger, Chinese silk and espionage, Spain's 200 year monopoly on vibrant reds, efforts to steal Spain' cochineal secret, the long history of indigo, French efforts to steal Indian indigo, the invention of synthetic dyes, modern sneaker culture and conceptions of value, Jackie Kennedy, fashion and glamour on the world stage today, and more.
Among the works mentioned in this episode:
- The book The Fabric of Civilization by Virginia Postrel
- The TV show The Vikings
- The Chatter podcast episode Private Sector Intelligence with Lewis Sage-Passant, June 9, 2022
- Virginia Postrel's YouTube channel
- The book The Power of Glamour by Virginia Postrel
- The Star Wars prequel movies
- The TV show Game of Thrones
- The TV show The Regime
- The article "Trump isn't just campaigning; He's selling his supporters a glamorous life" by Virginia Postrel, Washington Post, March 18, 20
- The movie The Hunger Games
- The book The Rosie Project by Graeme Simsion
- The book Fifth Sun by Camilla Townsend
Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Cara Shillenn of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.
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