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How Aunts Are The Unsung Heroes Of Black Families
Podcast |
Strange Fruit
Media Type |
audio
Categories Via RSS |
Society & Culture
Publication Date |
Jun 23, 2019
Episode Duration |
00:35:01

Mothering within Black communities can take many forms. Dr. Patricia Hill-Collins coined the term “other mother” to describe a woman who cares for a child that is not biologically her own.

In many Black families, the role of the aunt has fit this function. Sometimes aunts are blood or marriage relatives but many of them are chosen family – mom’s best friend from college or the elderly neighbor down the street who looks after the community’s children. She can serve as a quiet confidant or a gentle authority figure.

This week we spoke writer Brandon T. Harden about his Philadelphia Inquirer article, “day-black-aunts-20180511.html">They may not get a holiday, but ‘aunts’ are the backbone of the black community.”

Later in the show we talk with freelance journalist Sonia Weiser about the troubling financial realities of New York City’s Legal Aid attorneys – many of who have to moonlight as rideshare drivers or bartenders to make ends meet – as highlighted in her New York Times piece, “aid-lawyers-salary-ny.html">Lawyers by Day, Uber Drivers and Bartenders by Night.”

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Writer Brandon T. Harden on how aunts are the unsung heroes of black families. Plus, why New York City's Legal Aid attorneys are tending bar or driving Ubers to make ends meet.

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