Circularity has become a crucial topic in the textile sector, highlighting the need to rethink production models still rooted in linear logics. In this context, post-consumer textile waste represents one of the most pressing challenges, as it consists of heterogeneous, contaminated materials that often lack a recognizable identity. To address these issues, the European Union has introduced the Digital Product Passport (DPP), a tool designed to ensure transparency across the entire product lifecycle. However, in cases of open-loop recycling — where materials are radically transformed and lose all connection to their origin — the linear model of traceability proposed by the DPP reveals its limitations. This article offers a critical reading of these limits and introduces the concept of situated traceability, capable of also valuing the inherent opacity of post-consumer materials. Starting from a reflection on experimental waste transformation practices and from theoretical approaches that interpret materials as dynamic and relational entities, the article proposes a vision of the DPP as a potential narrative interface. In this perspective, tracing does not only mean identifying technical data, but making visible the contexts, relationships, transformations, and meanings that intertwine around the material.
Situated traceability in post-consumer textile waste: Integrating technical data with the becoming of matter
Carmen Digiorgio Giannitto
2026
Abstract
Circularity has become a crucial topic in the textile sector, highlighting the need to rethink production models still rooted in linear logics. In this context, post-consumer textile waste represents one of the most pressing challenges, as it consists of heterogeneous, contaminated materials that often lack a recognizable identity. To address these issues, the European Union has introduced the Digital Product Passport (DPP), a tool designed to ensure transparency across the entire product lifecycle. However, in cases of open-loop recycling — where materials are radically transformed and lose all connection to their origin — the linear model of traceability proposed by the DPP reveals its limitations. This article offers a critical reading of these limits and introduces the concept of situated traceability, capable of also valuing the inherent opacity of post-consumer materials. Starting from a reflection on experimental waste transformation practices and from theoretical approaches that interpret materials as dynamic and relational entities, the article proposes a vision of the DPP as a potential narrative interface. In this perspective, tracing does not only mean identifying technical data, but making visible the contexts, relationships, transformations, and meanings that intertwine around the material.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


