- Store Locations
- Kid Stuff
- About Us
- Bestsellers
- Award Winners
- Agatha Award
- Anthony Awards
- Caldecott Medal
- Edgar Allen Poe Award
- Hugo Award
- Indies Choice Award
- Lambda Literary Award
- Man Booker Prize
- National Book Awards
- National Book Critics Circle
- Nebula Award
- Newberry Award
- Nobel Prize for Literature
- PEN/Faulkner Award
- PEN/Hemingway Foundation
- Pulitzer Prizes
- James Beard Foundation
- Triangle Awards
- NCBA
- Books Inc. Bestsellers
- Indie Bestsellers
- Signed Books
- Top 10 of 2011 - NY Times
- Top10 2011 SF Chronicle
- Book Trailer
- Recently Reviewed
- Award Winners
- Book Clubs
- Classics I Forgot To Read
- Foreign Intrigue Book Club
- Healthy Lives: The Book Club
- Thinking Parents' Book Group
- First Fiction
- World Affairs Council
- SF LGBT/Books Inc.
- Desert Island Book Club
- Politically Inspired Book Club
- SF Travel Book Club
- The Modern Lit Book Club
- Big Yes Society
- 4th Tuesday Book Club
- Broken Compass Adventure
- Central SF Classic Lit
- Second Saturday
- Hands On Bay Area
- LitVoyeur (Online)
- Book Fairs
- Calendar of Events
- Newsletter
- Indie Next List
- Signed Books
- Browse & Search
Click on title to see which Books Inc. stores have stock. We do not carry every book in every store. We recommend calling stores that show low stock numbers before you go to pick up!
Fugitive Denim: A Moving Story of People and Pants in the Borderless World of Global Trade (Hardcover)
$26.95
Usually Ships in 1-5 days
Description
In the business of making and selling clothes, Made in labels do precious little to convey the constellation of treaties, countries, and people at work in the assembly of a simple pair of jeans. In Fugitive Denim journalist Rachel Louise Snyder reports from the far reaches of this multi-billion-dollar industry in search of the real people who make your clothes. From a cotton picker in Azerbaijan to a Cambodian seamstress, a denim maker in Italy to a fashion designer in New York, Snyder captures the human, environmental, and political forces at work in a dizzyingly complex and often absurd world. In a disarming and humorous voice, she ponders questions of equity, sweatshops, and corporate social responsibility through narratives of individual people, making an often academic subject accessible and compelling. Neither polemic nor prescription, Fugitive Denim captures what it means to be at work in the world in the twenty-first century.






