Ep 1: Our Hands Know How to Build the World We Want
This is the episode that explains why I made a podcast about textiles. Why fabric? Why thread? Because textiles are the material history of empire, and how people have fought back.
Every major empire has been built on the control of cloth. The Silk Road was named for fabric worth more than gold. When the British colonized India, they broke looms, cut off weavers' thumbs, and flooded markets with Manchester mill cloth. When Gandhi picked up a spinning wheel, he wasn't being symbolic. He was attacking the economic structure of colonialism thread by thread.

"Needle and thread can be tools of protest. It can be way more than the art of making. It's the art of sharing, the art of educating, the art of empowering, the art of informing, the art of creating empathy."
Sara Trail, Social Justice Sewing Academy
Think about Penelope in Homer's Odyssey, unraveling her weaving each night. Her loom as a tool of subversion. That story is three thousand years old. In 1912, suffragettes imprisoned at Holloway Prison were denied pen and paper, so they embroidered the names of hunger strikers onto handkerchiefs instead. Under Pinochet, Chilean women smuggled truth abroad in arpilleras. The AIDS Memorial Quilt made grief visible when the government wouldn't say the word AIDS.

"When I start, I often look at the clothes and think, I've got no idea what to do here. And I've learned that that's okay. And that's how people feel when they're grieving."
Mary Burgess, Woven Memories
This episode introduces the series through more than a dozen voices. Blacksmiths reframing their craft as life-giving. Quilters transforming the clothes of the dead into blankets for the living. Scholars tracing technology resistance from the Luddites to artists pushing back against generative AI today.

"Skill pushes in the opposite direction. It says that the world doesn't just happen to you, but you make things in the world. And that's a powerful feeling."
Gavin Mueller, author of "Breaking Things at Work"
Over sixteen episodes, we'll meet Sara Trail teaching young people that needle and thread can be tools of protest. Stephen Towns uncovering stories erased from American consciousness. Grace Roether and the Abolition Quilting Bee. Bonnie Peterson embroidering climate data. Nathan Ford and Maret Miller organizing quilters for Dee Dee's House, the first trans-led shelter in Kansas.
The world doesn't just happen to you. You make things in the world. That's the invitation.