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More Than Pretty Boxes

How the Rise of Professional Organizing Shows Us the Way We Work Isn’t Working

This study of the female-led industry of professional organizers helps us understand—and perhaps alleviate—the overwhelming demands society places on our time and energy.

For a widely dreaded, often mundane task, organizing one’s possessions has taken a surprising hold on our cultural imagination. Today, those with the means can hire professionals to help sort and declutter their homes. In More Than Pretty Boxes, Carrie M. Lane introduces us to this world of professional organizers and offers new insight into the domains of work and home, forever entangled—especially for women.

The female-dominated organizing profession didn’t have a name until the 1980s, but it is now the subject of countless reality shows, podcasts, and magazines. Lane draws on interviews with organizers, including many of the field’s founders, to trace the profession’s history and uncover its enduring appeal to those seeking meaningful, flexible, self-directed work. Taking readers behind the scenes of real-life organizing sessions, More Than Pretty Boxes details the strategies organizers use to help people part with their belongings, and it also explores the intimate, empathetic relationships that can form between clients and organizers.

But perhaps most importantly, More Than Pretty Boxes helps us think through a tangled set of questions around neoliberal work arrangements, overconsumption, emotional connection, and the deeply gendered nature of paid and unpaid work. Ultimately, Lane situates organizing at the center of contemporary conversations around how work isn’t working anymore and makes a case for organizing’s radical potential to push back against the overwhelming demands of work and the home, too often placed on women’s shoulders. Organizers aren’t the sole answer to this crisis, but their work can help us better understand both the nature of the problem and the sorts of solace, support, and solutions that might help ease it.

288 pages | 2 halftones, 7 line drawings | 6 x 9

Culture Studies

Sociology: Occupations, Professions, Work, Sociology--Marriage and Family

Women's Studies

Reviews

“A surprising number of us live with too much stuff, or face life crises in which what used to be a comfortable amount turns into overwhelming excess. This all-too-common problem has led to professional organizers, a job that Carrie M. Lane describes with great warmth and humor as she shows how these everyday champions of personal order emerged as a modern-day professional guild to bring solace to clients afflicted with some of the curses of capitalist consumption. More Than Pretty Boxes is a captivating exploration of how a feminized job gains recognition and symbolic value, ethnography at its most sympathetic, savvy, and subtle.”

Ilana Gershon, author of "The Pandemic Workplace: How We Learned to Be Citizens in the Office"

Table of Contents

Introduction
Part I: The Rise of Professional Organizing
1: The First Organizers: Women Have Always Been Expected to Manage the Stuff
2: Collaborative Competitors: The Growth of a Profession
3: Alternatives to Standard Employment, Especially for Women
Part II: The Organizing Process
4: Sort, Purge, Put Back: The People-Changing Work of Managing Things
5: Where It Hurts: Connective Labor and the Feminist Work of Professional Organizing
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
Appendix: Methodology
Notes
Bibliography

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