{"id":2417,"date":"2021-06-11T10:13:34","date_gmt":"2021-06-11T08:13:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/?p=2417"},"modified":"2021-06-11T10:13:34","modified_gmt":"2021-06-11T08:13:34","slug":"the-fashion-industry-why-the-toxicity","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/2417\/the-fashion-industry-why-the-toxicity\/","title":{"rendered":"The fashion industry: why the toxicity?"},"content":{"rendered":"
A few months ago, negative stories about Amsterdam Fashion Institute (AMFI) started to come out. More and more students started to speak up about the unsafe environment at the school. But why are a lot of negative stories like this coming from the fashion industry, what makes this industry toxic?<\/strong><\/p>\n Emotional damage, burnouts, teachers being bullies and racism. These were a few of the many complaints that students and former-students from fashion school AMFI\u00a0 were claiming.\u00a0 AMFI is a well-known fashion school in Amsterdam and everyone knows it\u2019s hard to get in. Once you are in, the pressure doesn\u2019t stop, because the work pressure is off limits. Students started to speak up and it even reached the Dutch government, who are doing a big investigation at the school now.<\/p>\n Sharon (22) is a former fashion design student at AMFI: \u201cThe teachers expected us to work every night during finals week. They said that sleep is the last thing you can think about.\u201d Her experience at the school is not a positive one, at the end of her studies the massive workload resulted in a burnout. When she informed her teacher about it, he just said: \u201cIt is just something you have to deal with, burnouts are normal and part of life.\u201d After hearing this, Sharon quit her studies at AMFI. \u201cFor me it was such a relief when I quit the school, after two years I finally felt free,\u201d Sharon says. \u201cFor two years teachers have made me feel so incredibly insecure. Every assignment that I did wasn\u2019t good enough. It was exhausting.\u201d A lot of other students are having similar complaints. Students didn\u2019t feel save in the school\u2019s environment. \u201cThe use of drugs was normal at AMFI. The teachers knew about it and even tolerated it.\u201d But why do these things happen at a school, a place that should be a safe environment? Students have to work nights after nights to finish a collection, models have to have size 34 to be \u2018pretty\u2019 and burn outs are normalized. But why? What is it about the fashion industry that makes it toxic?<\/p>\n A personal matter<\/strong><\/p>\n Model Roos van der Heijden (21) followed the news about AMFI: \u201cAll the bad stuff that is happening at the school doesn\u2019t surprise me at all.\u201d Roos started working as a model a when she was just fifteen years old and modelled for high-end brands like Chanel and Louis Vuitton and was featured on the cover of Vogue. \u201cWorking as a model, I have experienced similar things. The fashion industry is extremely harsh.\u201d \u201cMany people assume that the fashion world is all about glitter and glamour, and in some way it\u2019s true,\u201d Roos continues. \u201cI feel blessed that I am able to travel for my work, meeting talented people and wear beautiful clothes. But I also saw the other side of the industry.\u201d She knows a lot of girls with eating disorders because of the high demands models face in the industry. \u201cMy parents were very strict, and really checked it I was eating enough. But a lot of girls were doing it alone and didn\u2019t have support from their parents. I saw girls getting thinner and thinner until they ended up in the hospital, it was horrible.\u201d<\/p>\n As a response to the question \u2018what makes the fashion industry so toxic?\u2019, Roos continues: \u201cFashion is about not about regular beauty, but about beauty that sometimes, goes beyond reality. Size 32 or 34 is not reality, however, in a lot of people\u2019s perspectives, it is the beauty standard. And size 40 or 42 is not. Beauty is also personal and individual, I believe that is what makes it so toxic, because it really involves human beings and the way they look, weigh and work. It is a real personal matter if you get criticised in this world, I think that makes it so toxic. Also, the people that are successful in this world, are very successful. Since it is very hard to \u2018make\u2019 it in this world. Because of that people become arrogant when they make it. They feel like they can handle the whole world, and nothing can stop them. They think it\u2019s allowing them to act horrible and only think about themselves, that makes it toxic as well.\u201d<\/p>\n