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Organize 365 Podcast

494 - The Secret History of Home Economics Part 2 (1940- Now)

Organize 365 Podcast

Lisa Woodruff

Education, Entrepreneurship, Self-improvement, Business

4.51.3K Ratings

🗓️ 22 July 2022

⏱️ 23 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This is the third episode is a series on Home Economics and the book The Secret History of Home Economics by Danielle Dreilinger. In the first episode, I talked to you about my personal family history. In the last episode, we talked about how Home Economics grew and moved outside of personal homes in the 1800s and early 1900s.

Listen to all of the episodes in this series:

In this episode, we pick up the timeline at World War II. The ending of the war brought a change with fewer women in the workforce and fewer women going to college. Two-thirds of women were married by the time they reached age 24. Despite new technology, in the 1950s, these women were still spending 52 hours a week on housework. At this time the American Home Economics Association defined Home Economics as being concerned with strengthening family life. 

A divide emerged. On one side were women who understood the original definition of Home Economics. They believed that what happens at home is important, is a science, and should be studied in higher education. On the other hand, there were children of the next generation like me who were taught that Home Economics was about socialization and based on what the government and consumer brands wanted for society.

You either had to be a fulltime homemaker or have a fulltime career. Jobs held by men generally brought in enough income for women to have the luxury of being primary homemakers. There were still scientific advancements being made in the field of Home Economics during this time period, but brands like Betty Crocker and Johnson & Johnson were driving the narrative of what it meant to run your family.

I love digging into the history of divides in thinking like this. My grandmother never understood the controversy. She said to just do the work! It doesn't matter where the work is or what the work pays. Just do the work. 

As we move forward, I want to talk more about the division of housework. How did housework go from being all women's work to now being a discussion about having equity at home?

What I really want you to see is the invisible work that is being done at home. Much of what we do is on autopilot and was learned from our mothers and grandmothers. There is a shift in process. Everyone in the family wants to feel valued for the work that they are contributing to the family. 

In the next episode, I'll share how I worked myself out of being a fulltime stay-at-home mom to being a working mom who traveled for six weeks last summer. (Spoiler alert! Nothing fell apart at home while I was gone!)

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This week's mailbag comes to us from Brigitte.

0:03.4

Hi Lisa, I just wanted to say thank you for the amazing information that you have been

0:08.9

sharing with me since I have signed up for your newsletter.

0:13.3

I am an entrepreneur, a home organization, and design enthusiast.

0:18.4

So far, your newsletter and blog posts have helped me gain lots of knowledge on organizing

0:23.6

different parts of a home.

0:25.6

I have really been inspired by your mini courses, the Sunday basket.

0:30.4

The printables are really user-friendly and useful.

0:33.8

Keep up the good work.

0:35.7

Do you have an organized 365 success story?

0:39.1

If so, we would love to hear about it.

0:41.6

Please send us an email at Customer Service at Organize 365 and tell us how you have taken

0:47.4

back your home, your paper, and your life with Organize 365.

0:55.6

Welcome to the Organize 365 podcast.

1:01.8

I'm your host, Professional Organizer, Productivity Expert, and Motivational Speaker, Lisa Woodruff.

1:09.2

This podcast will help you embrace progress over perfection and create lasting, functional

1:14.9

organizing in your home.

1:16.7

I have so much to share with you, so let's get started.

1:21.5

Welcome back to the third part of my history of home economics series.

1:26.9

The first episode I talked to you about my personal history, which is always helpful, knowing

1:31.6

your point of view when you start something.

1:33.6

Last time we talked about the history of home economics from basically no home economics

...

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