unSILOed with Greg LaBlanc

522. How The Invention of Choice Unlocked Freedom with Sophia Rosenfeld

Mar 31, 2025
Sophia Rosenfeld, a history professor at the University of Pennsylvania and author of "The Age of Choice," explores how our understanding of choice has shaped freedom. She discusses the historical role of choice in consumerism and politics, and how it initially gained a feminine reputation. The conversation delves into the paradox of choice, where having options can be both empowering and coercive, particularly in areas like sex work. Rosenfeld also critiques the moral implications of choice, urging a deeper look into whether more options genuinely lead to greater freedom.
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INSIGHT

Aristocratic Freedom vs. Choice

  • For aristocrats, freedom was having aspects of life settled, not choice over them.
  • Tocqueville admired democracy but was uneasy about its unsettling qualities compared to aristocratic stability.
ANECDOTE

Dancing and Partner Choice Anxiety

  • In the 19th century, social balls were spaces where people experienced new freedoms choosing partners.
  • Yet, strict etiquette governed interactions due to anxieties about social status and propriety.
INSIGHT

Prostitution and Choice's Ambivalence

  • Prostitutes in the 19th century were seen both as liberated modern women and as fallen.
  • They symbolize the ambivalence about choice, especially around sex work, even within feminism.
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