Online Introductory course on Decoloniality and Fashion | 2025

Online Introductory course on Decoloniality and Fashion | 2025

Join us for a crash course on challenging colonial norms in the fashion systems and industry, all from the comfort of your own home in 2025!

By Research Collective for Decoloniality & Fashion

Date and time

Location

Online

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 14 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 30 minutes

Online Introductory course on Decoloniality and Fashion | 2025

Course description

This seven-week online introductory course on decoloniality & fashion explores both conceptual and practice-based aspects of decoloniality and fashion and presents participants with an exciting collaborative opportunity—through its discursive and participatory format—to examine a range of tools, formats and practices that will strengthen their position to disrupt dominant eurocentric fashion and formulate diverse, ethical and culturally sustainable alternatives.

We welcome participants from all walks of life, with or without a background in fashion—students, researchers, educators, curators, fashion practitioners, critical thinkers, and activists committed to undoing contemporary fashion's violence and erasure.

The focus is on knowledge transmission; we aim to learn from and with each other. The course is convened by some of the most exciting decolonial and fashion thinkers to be confirmed.

The classes are every Tuesday evening, 8-9:30 pm (GMT+2), the Netherlands time, in English and consist of 1h30 hours, including a lecture-type presentation, assignments in smaller breakout rooms sessions, and group discussions.

The course is organized around seven topics, and it examines some key problems of the contemporary fashion industry and their roots in the modern civilization project. It explores obscured intersectional forms of discrimination, erasure, and exploitation within contemporary fashion perpetuated in sustainability discourses, fashion curricula, and curation practices. Offering many decolonial alternatives that work towards a politics of redress, a politics of aesthetic and epistemic restitution and repair, and a politics of giving back a place in the present, of hosting and emplacing what has been denied and erased.


Course details

Frequently asked questions

This course is for whom?

This course is for whom? It is for you if you're curious about how fashion can challenge colonial legacies and promote cultural diversity.

$275Sep 23 · 11:00 AM PDT