Front Burner - The ‘trad wives’ glamorizing life at home
Episode Date: April 24, 2024For some time now, there’s been a growing trend on TikTok and Instagram of young women sharing about their daily lives as “trad wives.” “Traditional wives” forego the workplace, extol the vi...rtues of homemaking, and often talk about the ways they “submit” to their husbands.So why do these women say they’ve chosen a life at home? How does their messaging cross into religion and politics? And is this “movement” a reaction to the burdens on modern women, or a threat to feminism’s progress?Journalist Sophie Elmhirst recently published a piece in the New Yorker titled “The Rise and Fall of the Trad Wife.”For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcriptsTranscripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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I don't want a job. I don't want to be a corporate girly. I don't want to climb the ladder. I don't
want to be a boss babe. I don't want to do any of that. I don't want to be the-
Hi, I'm Jamie Poisson. I do not want to do that. You know what I want to do? I want to be a corporate girly. I don't want to climb the ladder. I don't want to be a boss babe. I don't want to do any of that. I don't want to be the... Hi, I'm Jamie Poisson. I do not want to do that.
You know what I want to do? I want to be home. I want to be cooking in the kitchen. I want to be
cleaning. I want to be shopping. For some time now, this has been a growing trend on TikTok and
Instagram. Young women with huge followings sharing their day-to-day lives as trad wives or
traditional wives. Being a traditional wife is so much more than just cooking and cleaning and wearing house dresses.
It is taking your house and making it a home.
But it's not just this picture of domestic bliss and its aesthetics that's being painted here.
It's also wrapped up with religion and politics, economics, and influencer culture.
So today, we're going to try and unpack all of that with journalist Sophie Elmhurst.
She recently wrote a piece for The New Yorker titled The Rise and Fall of the Tradwife.
All right, let's get into it.
Hi, Sophie. Thank you very much for being here.
Hi, thank you for having me.
So before we get into all the stuff surrounding Tradwives, I want to get to know some of the big influencers.
A couple of names that have popped up, Nora Smith, Hannah Nealman, Estee Williams.
Who are these women? What kind of backgrounds do they come from?
Right. So I guess it's, you know, inevitably when that kind of meme or it implements a trend like
this, they all get bracketed under one thing. And actually, if you go down a level and you see that
they're all quite distinct, although there are very clear kind of shared traits. Hannah Nealman,
who you mentioned, is probably the kind of leading light of all of
them. She is a mother of eight. She's a homesteader. She lives on a farm. The voice teacher is just
about to come over and we've been doing all sorts of sourdough and willow today. So we got lots to
clean up. And, you know, she's milking cows and baking sourdough
and essentially kind of running the domestic side of this farm
and this family life,
but very doggedly documenting it all mostly on Instagram.
So these two stairs that we're trying to catch,
they ran all the way up here on the hill.
They've given me a workout.
And the picture she paints is of a kind of very hardworking but very wholesome domestic life,
sort of spliced with, she also appears in beauty pageants,
so there are some surprising elements as well.
But she has like nearly 9 million followers, I think, now.
And so she's a very, very kind of well-established and leading figure i guess in in this whole scene
tonight is supper club so basically what that means is every few weeks we invite some friends
and family over and we have a meal together and and we make a meal with food that we either raised
or we buy it from a farm that we know and trust.
And then, yeah, then there are a whole host of others who there are a variety.
And so you can find them in different countries.
It's not just North America.
Esty Williams, you mentioned, is also in North America.
She has a kind of Marilyn Monroe aesthetic.
She really emphasizes a lot more of the sort of visuals, the food, the outfits, the hair curling.
Get ready with me to go to our Omas.
I'm going to be walking you through some of my makeup.
This is my favorite lip color.
This is the new Confidant by L'Oreal.
But she is also much more explicit in her content than Hannah Nealman
in terms of much closer to a sort of political messaging.
And I say political in a kind of small P way,
but around whether women should go to college. The problem is not girls going to college and
getting an education, right? It's not the classroom. It's the environment of the universities
where girls and boys are separated from their family and the structure, the morals that they
grew up with. You know, more provocative content in a way, and is very sort of vocal about, I guess,
one of the fundamental tenets of the trad wife movement, which is like obeying your husband.
I submit and I serve my husband. This is a biblical thing. So don't twist this into
something that it's not. It is a blessing to be my husband's helpmate. And the Bible
has the man of the household, not the woman.
So he leads. And then you've got a bunch more. You've got Gwen the milkmaid in Canada,
Jasmine Dennis in Australia, Abigail Roth in America, who is known as Classically Abby.
Nara Smith, you mentioned, is another very, you know, relatively, sort of relatively newer on the
scene, but has gained a huge following in a short space of time. I could be giving birth to my third child in four weeks which is so crazy
to think about I never thought I'd be 22 with three kids three and under but it's been a very
wild ride that I'm so excited for so today let's spend a realistic morning together. And Alina
Petit who was the main subject of my profile who was a rare kind of Brit on the scene, who was less vocal than she used to be, but was very influential in her time.
Hello and welcome back to the Darling Academy.
My name is Alina Kate Petit and I talk about etiquette, feminine lifestyle, homemaking and being a traditional housewife.
I want to come back to Alina with you in one moment, but I wonder if you could tell me a little bit more about Gwen the Milkmaid, just because this is a Canadian podcast.
So it'd be nice to learn a little bit more about her.
Yeah, she is a fascinating one.
So, you know, there are all sorts of little like nuances and distinctions to be drawn out in this scene, in this movement, as some of them like to call it.
And she exemplifies, I guess, a particular strand of it.
exemplifies, I guess, a particular strand of it. Whereas you have a Hannah Nealman who you feel like, okay, she's, whatever you think of it, her lifestyle and her choices and the way she is
raising her family, you can tell this is actually how she is living day to day. This is, it feels
very real to a certain extent. There are issues with that, but we can come back to those.
Someone like Gwen The Milkmaid, it doesn't take long in a kind of internet exploratory mission to find that she's
pivoted to this identity that she used to be on only fans she used to have a youtube channel where
there was a lot of asmr content so glad to meet you i'm gwen she used to do a lot of different
things um and she sometimes refers back and she's been very open about that.
She's made videos, you know, saying how she kind of has come to the sort of trad wife identity,
but affiliated to that, to a sort of religion, to different ways of seeing the world, of being in the world.
But it's something that she has, you know, come to later and that she's kind of regret some of these earlier choices.
Three years ago, back in 2020, made an only fans account and despite making more money than ever before it simply put
it destroyed my life but thankfully praise god he saved me and he helped me to turn my life around
and but i guess if you were more cynical you would maybe argue that she has sort of gone where the
following might be leading her or at least the algorithm where the algorithm is rewarding her so
um it's essentially switching out one online identity for another and her content is one of
the most sort of extremely aesthetic i just told you guys last week the aprons finally came
you can't really see it fully here but it's got beautiful ruffles on the bottom as well.
Ruffles all down the back.
And it's just this really pretty flowery print.
It's all about the dresses and the kind of the visuals and the showing the kind of particular perfection of her sourdough loaf.
And sourdough really is a thing that crosses many of these women. It is such a thing. And just, you know, if we're going to talk about through lines of which
sourdough is one, I know, I know, I take your point that there's a lot of variation going on
here. But if you were to try and kind of sum up the movement, how would you do that? How would
you describe it? Sure, I think there are some fundamental tenets. I think one of them is you stay home,
you raise your family. I mean, they don't all have children, but your emphasis, your whole identity,
your whole, your day is essentially devoted to supporting your husband in the first instance.
And that's key. My husband does not have to lift a finger when he is at home,
because if he's the breadwinner and he goes out the
provider he works and he works long hours and he works a very physical labor job he's an electrician
so he does not need to come home and clean up he doesn't need to help me cook and i think that is
the sort of fundamental at the core of what being a trad way is that is it and then a religious
component is not necessary but is very very common that a lot of them,
you know, they find the sort of basis for this in the Bible, in the book of Proverbs
specifically.
I think what then the time is devoted to, or at least how it's documented on these platforms
is, you know, where your energies are going.
So it's absolutely about taking care of the home.
Food, cooking is very important, but also so is your appearance because you're there to please your husband. You're there to kind of look the part as well as act the part.
I always make sure I am put together. This is a really big thing. I think that waking up in
the morning and just staying in pajamas all day, it's not the way to go. Pull yourself together,
put some makeup on, put a cute
outfit on, do your hair, do something and make yourself look a little more put together. And
trust me, he does notice. And I would say that's not, obviously, these are very visual, especially
when you're talking about TikTok and Instagram, these are very visual platforms. So they reward
that kind of content. But I would say that is also very key to a lot of these women's output and sort of self-presentation is how they is playing the part yeah there's like a lot of
beautiful kind of flowing dresses if that's a fair way for me to describe um just from what
i've seen in the last couple of days and by the way that has a kind of moral and almost political
component as well like you know a lot of them talk or write about modest dressing and modesty being an important part of their identity. And that has all sorts of connotations
and sort of historical resonances. But yeah, it's more than just the aesthetic, I'd say.
You mentioned Elena before, who in your piece, you talk about her as kind of like the OG trad wife, right? And just tell me a little bit more about her and interestingly, how she's now
been distancing herself from like the current iteration of this whole movement and why.
Yeah. So she's a fascinating case. And she was, in a way, kind of early adopter.
She was a trad wife before we kind of all knew the term.
So in that sense, she's almost, I think, of all the ones I've come across,
or certainly the ones I spoke to, she's the most authentic, if you like,
of all of them in the sense, the way she described it to me,
she wanted to live this kind of life.
She wanted to stay home from when she was a little girl.
You know, all she wanted was to be a parent and take care of her house. And she sort of loved playing dolls and all these things.
I grew up in a single parent household and my mum had to go out to work. The home became just this
huge burden for her. And I suppose at that point in time, I probably identified that I didn't want
that same life.
She then went through the motions of a career. But as soon as she had sort of settled with her partner and married, and especially once she'd had a baby, they had a discussion and they decided
that's what she's going to do. She would stay home. And it was really only after all of that,
and after she was living the life in a way that she started to talk publicly about it and write
publicly about it, she set up a blog. Only then, once she'd started to kind of talk even more publicly about it, started to go on TV and got more and more active
on Instagram, but she was very early in the kind of whole trad wife movement and way. Then once
people kind of caught on to this being a more widespread thing, people became more and more
interested in what she was doing. And what she described to me, I think that the sort of turn
for her in a way away from the movement was hearing from a lot of women who would write to her saying, well, hang on, I don't seem to match the aesthetic that I see.
You know, all these sort of perfect, slim, often white women who, you know, wearing these dresses, I can't wear those dresses, you know, for whatever reason.
Maybe I'm not the right shape or feel like I'm the right shape or maybe I'm disabled or I'm, you know, there are all sorts of reasons why they didn't feel that they saw themselves represented.
And yet they were all saying that this was the life that they were leading, the values that they also believed in, of staying at home and being a traditional wife.
And so she suddenly was like, oh, hang on, maybe we're doing a disservice to this.
And she felt the principles of it very deeply.
influx of other trad wife influences, I guess, and felt that there was a kind of exploitation of the idea of what she felt was very sacred values going on where people were kind of pivoting
to this for commercial gain or for provocation or for political reasons. And she found herself
becoming increasingly uncomfortable, I guess, with sort of publicly holding this identity and
was getting more and more heat as people were starting to kind of also, therefore,
other people were starting to question these women more and more and saying well hang on
how does this connect to the outright how does this connect to lots of sort of questionable
sort of thinking and and politics you know her great sort of radical act was to come off instagram
although she still blogs and she still is i would say relatively active participant but in her mind
she's you know it's a it's a separation from that kind
of what has become this kind of highly asceticized and quite politicized sort of online movement.
Tell me more about those criticisms. You mentioned there have been many questions
and criticism about how this connects to the alt-right. Just elaborate on that for me.
Yeah, I mean, it's so interesting. And I think it's really complicated.
And it's more complicated than it seems.
I think it's easy to sort of look at some of this and make those kind of loose connections
between, you know, there's a lot of talk now about Christian nationalism.
There's a lot of talk about, yes, white supremacy.
And I think sometimes these links are made quite casually.
And I think you have to be careful.
Like a lot of these women who I spoke to very adamantly said, I don't, you know, I've never talked about politics on my channel. I'm
not interested in politics. I'm talking about the home and the family and marriage. And I guess I
would take the view that, well, all those things are equally political in a way. They might not be
kind of about, you know, who you vote for or which presidential candidate you're supporting,
but those all in, you know, marriage and the home are political spaces as well um a lot of the the views that they espouse
whether it's on whether women should go to college or how women dress or uh on abortion on in some
cases homeschooling or education deep suspicion of the government vaccination you know these this
ends up being a political picture i guess that, that they're painting and an influential one. And I would also say what's key and where these women live, in a sense,
are on social media platforms and how those platforms work is by connecting you to similar
people. You know, you scroll down one person and you get to another person, right?
Well, similar or even more extreme, I guess.
Yeah, and exactly. And especially you're very quickly, and I found and did this experiment a bunch of times, you're very, very quickly getting to way more extreme, I guess. Yeah, and inevitably, exactly. And especially, you're very quickly,
and I found and did this experiment a bunch of times,
you're very, very quickly getting to way more extreme,
way more niche,
and way more explicitly political or extreme accounts.
So it's naive, I think, of them to think
that there's no connection.
Well, also, I think you have to be careful
about overstating that connection.
But yeah, it's very real, I think. lead to a life-changing connection. Watch new episodes of Dragon's Den free on CBC Gem. Brought
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Cups. Another criticism that I've heard mounted many times is that by, you know, encouraging
other women to live this kind of lifestyle where you're financially dependent on a man or, you
know, we should say, you know, these are largely based on heteronormative
relationships, that women can find themselves in abusive situations or find themselves
with nothing if their husbands leave them. So tell me more about what you think about the
criticism that these, you know, trad wives are influencing young women into potentially
unsafe situations?
Oh, for sure. I mean, I think, in personal terms, I think it's very valid. But I think what has really provoked and hurt in a way a lot of women is this idea of what seems to be a kind of undoing
of years of feminist effort to establish women's rights in all manner of ways, but not least in
like the 19th century, at least in my
country, in the UK, a woman's right to own property and to be financially independent.
And if she's earning an income to hold onto that income. And, you know, these were things that
were established a very long time ago, relatively speaking, but were very precious. And the idea
that a woman might willingly be giving that up. And as you say, where does that blur sometimes into,
you know, it's hard to speak about the inside reality of how those decisions are made. But
we all know and are better educated about issues of coercive control. And one of the key
elements of coercive control is kind of financial control. And that is, you know, now a form of
essentially a form of domestic abuse. And I think those lines can be very blurry and
for every trad wife who is absolutely kind of in control you know Alina would say this was a
feminist choice of hers because it's a choice. My view of feminism is about choices and to say on
one hand you can go into the working world and compete with men yet you're not allowed to stay
home that's actually taking
a choice away. You know, she's aware of all the options available to her and she's made the choice
to live in, you know, according to these traditional values. Yeah, you don't know how
many are maybe living those traditional values, but it hasn't entirely been their choice or it's
not one that they feel that they can opt out of. So I think it's a really valid and kind of
worrying side to all this. And I think probably other women's too are
listening right now that you're kind of listening in horror a little bit. Like, is this what women
before us fought for? For women to like idealize ironing their husband's shirts and having no
financial independence. But I guess if I'm trying to step back here and be a little bit more charitable, I think I do see some of the allure, right?
Like, you know, I have little kids.
I work in a home where two adults are working.
This idea that you can have it all, right?
It does kind of seem like a farce.
You know, you can have it all, but you have to do it all, right?
And that can be exhausting and overwhelming and make you feel like you're failing and everything.
And I think that's magnified, right, if you don't have a partner that's sharing equally in the house.
And so from that perspective, I kind of understand why this idea of putting on like a flowing dress and having time to bake your kids fresh bread is appealing and perhaps more peaceful.
And what do you make of that it's sort
of like a clap back to late late stage capitalism yeah i think that's the well i think that's the
really interesting point because i think that's when you get onto the kind of socio-economic side
of this in a in a wider sense in a societal sense and where i think a lot of younger women and
younger people find themselves more broadly as just a kind of in a place of real economic insecurity, job insecurity, future insecurity, climate insecurity. You know,
we live in an anxious age, you know, this is well documented. And I think some of what is being
communicated on these tradwives accounts isn't just about the sort of fundamental values, but
it's also about this sense of sort of safety and warmth, and there's a kind
of coziness to it. So I think part of what is being communicated is this idea of almost having
an escape route out of the hustle and out of the kind of economic pressures. Like if you can kind
of outsource all that to a partner, you've been trying so hard for so long, and that maybe you
could just like retreat home and there's a kind
of cocoon like a liltore I think which who knows how long that would last for many of us but I
think it ties in a little bit I don't know whether this is as resonant in Canada but there's a lot
going on in my country at the moment about these movements of like slow living and wanting to like
you know reduce hours or people sort of actively trying to work less
quiet quitting yeah yes exactly all of this and this sense that this whole game that we were kind
of sold which is like to work harder and harder hustle more and more you know rise up the ranks
whatever that it hasn't come good right like you know most of the sort of younger generation kind
of kind of with the rent let alone to sort of buy a property or, you know, this whole
thing feels like a stitch up. And I guess there's this strange, what this movement seems to sort of
offer is a kind of off ramp to some degree. And that, you know, when you read the comments on a
lot of under these women's posts, and it shocked me, honestly, like the number of very young women,
or at least by their account, if you believe them in the comments of young women, you know, way before having kids who were like, God, I really,
the tone was aspirational. It was like, oh, I hope I can live like this one day. You know,
it wasn't like, you know, well done you. I'm sort of looking back and sort of, you know,
as a traditional older mother or whatever, it was 22 year olds saying, you know, this is my dream.
As someone 20 years older than that, that was not ever what I was sort of raised to sort of think should be my dream. Right. And I imagine that you were raised on like the idea of the girl boss.
Right. And that was so prevalent in the not just sort of family or friends wise, but just in the
culture, right? It was all girl power, you know, that kind of late 90s, early 2000s. It was all
about female empowerment and breaking glass ceilings and
everything else. And I strongly believe from the other perspective that we still have a long way
to go on that, you know, like there are still issues around many things, not least equal pay.
But absolutely, the culture was to sort of to hustle and to sort of that you have every right
to sort of the equal place. And so this seems like a kind of unbelievably retrograde by comparison.
I'm just like curious, because you've spent so much time with your head in this.
How harmful do you think that this is to the progress that feminism has made?
Again, I don't think that should be overstated.
I think, you know, this is sort of another economic reality, which is, again, expressed
in these comments, which is like, oh, I would love to do this, but I could never afford to because, you know, my household needs two incomes. And
then as someone put it to me recently, it was like, well, hang on, a lot of these women, you
know, especially the very, you know, the successful ones, the Hannah Nealman's, Browlerina Farms,
well, it is two incomes because she's earning, I would imagine, through, you know, various
sponsorships and everything else, a tidy sum. There's like kind of a deep irony here. Yeah.
Yeah. Which is its whole own story,
because it's like, well, hang on. So, you know, this is what I call the sort of hustle of the
anti-hustle, because in a way it's become its own hustle, right? That they are turning a very
traditional non-working identity into, you know, quite ambitious working, you know, way clever
branding, working identity. So I think in a way what it's done is probably given visibility
to a life choice that many women or more women than we realize we're making for all sorts of
reasons. And what it's done is just sort of in one way kind of publicize that, but also commodify
that to a certain extent. I think where the concern is, if there is one, is where it does intersect with political movements
and where it kind of galvanizes, I guess, some of the more worrying, you know, sort of outright or
just sort of far right political movements, especially in the kind of North American
context, especially given an American election coming up, you know, that it's playing its role
in that kind of deep sense of cultural and political division, I guess. And
I think that role is probably not insignificant. Okay. Sophie, this was great. It was really
fascinating listening to you. I could talk to you about this whole day. Thank you very much
for coming on. No worries. Thank you for having me.
All right, that's it for today.
I'm Jamie Poisson.
Thanks so much for listening.
Talk to you tomorrow. For more CBC Podcasts, go to cbc.ca slash podcasts.