I’m excited to have Danita Platt on the show today. I didn’t know anyone of color in the field of care tasks until I met her. Her content resonates with me and my views around care tasks, so I hope you’ll enjoy hearing more from Danita!
Show Highlights:
- Who Danita is and how she became an expert on gentle care tasks
- How our society over the last two generations has moralized care tasks and tied them to the worth of a woman
- Why we need to rethink our views about care tasks and “being a good woman” that go back to the founding of the US, historically speaking
- How the concept of “invisible labor” has carried over from colonial days even to today
- How many white people were able to live the lives they did because of the cheap, exploitable labor of Black women
- How the Great Migration happened to move many Black families to northern cities from the South
- How the shift happened to push Black (and white) women to work industrial jobs while men were away during the war
- How the push is recurring for 1950s homemaking to be viewed as the superior role for women
- What we DON’T talk about in the fulfilling life of a homemaker
- How Danita chooses to honor the Black women who had to wash clothes, clean house, and cook meals under duress–with no freedom or choice of their own
- What Danita would say to women who want to live more joyfully in their homes and experience more freedom and quality of life
Resources:
Connect with Danita: TikTok and Instagram
Mentioned in this episode: Sisters in Hate: American Women on the Front Lines of White Nationalism
Connect with KC: TikTok, Instagram, and Website
Get KC’s book, How to Keep House While Drowning
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices