Cloth makes the world go round. On birth, a human baby is wrapped in swaddling before she even feeds. On death, survivors must pick out the deceased’s best clothes for his burial, cremation or spiritual onward journey. The modern textile industry, through large-scale harvesting, manufacture and circulation of yarns, cloth, skills and labour, is the cornerstone of capitalist economic regimes and their globalizing colonial expansion in modern and recent history, driving the enslavement of human labour around its reproduction and devoting vast tracts of land to fibre procurement. How far back can we trace this dual biological and sociological impact of textile industries?
YARNSCAPES, aimed to investigate the relationship between textiles and the emergence and expansion of early complex societies, through examination of published data from the eastern Mediterranean and western Asia in the 4th and 3rd millennium BCE. The objective of this project is, therefore, to develop a new set of scientific techniques to allow us to first identify and then explain the changing relationship between yarn and the environment.