Dire Straights

The definitive feminist history of the wine mom

Mar 4, 2026
A lively dive into the history of moms getting drunk or high as a form of escape and resistance. They trace ancient ritual rebellion, Victorian self-medication, midcentury tranquilizers, and internet-era wine-mom culture. The conversation links marketing, pandemic shifts, racialized drug politics, and how maternal coping can become collective political power. Ends with a cheeky toast to radicalized mothers.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Victorian Drug Use Normalized Maternal Self Medication

  • Laudanum and later cocaine were normalized remedies for women's pain and melancholy in the 19th century.
  • Amanda cites Queen Victoria's widespread drug use and Freud-era practices to show elite legitimization of medicating women.
INSIGHT

Mommy's Little Helper Hid Coercion In A Pill

  • Mid-20th-century sedatives like Valium were marketed to calm domestic stress, blurring voluntary use and coercion.
  • Hosts contrast maenadic liberation with 'mommy's little helper' as a tool for domestic submission.
INSIGHT

Ads Show Gendered Marketing Of Sedation Versus Liberation

  • 1960s drug and alcohol ads explicitly targeted pregnant and domestic women with sedation narratives.
  • Tracy reads vintage ads where pills promise coping and vodka is sexualized, showing gendered marketing distinctions.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app