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Britney cashes in on her freedom

For women, money has long been intertwine­d with independen­ce

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FOR many, candles are a small but bright indulgence, the kind of item you might impulsivel­y toss in your shopping cart after a hard week.

For Britney Spears, they have become a sign of newfound financial independen­ce.

In an Instagram video posted on Tuesday, Spears spoke to her fans for the first time since a judge ended her 13-year conservato­rship last week.

In the video, Spears, speaking on the patio of her Thousand Oaks, California, home, said: “I’m grateful, honestly, for each day and being able to have the keys to my car, and being able to be independen­t and feel like a woman, and owning an ATM card – seeing cash for the first time, being able to buy candles.”

“It’s the little things for us, women, but it makes a huge difference, and I’m grateful for that. It’s nice. It’s really nice.”

The comments struck a chord with Spears’s fans, who applauded her newfound financial freedom.

“It brings tears to hear a grown woman say, I finally get to hold my car keys in my hands and drive anywhere. I actually have cash now. I can buy a candle,” said one Twitter user.

“You go girl! Every woman should be able to control their own finances,” said another.

Spears’s battle against her court-ordered conservato­rship has drawn attention to the specific restrictio­ns and ethical issues around the legal structure. But her struggle to regain financial independen­ce is one that women in a wide variety of contexts can relate to.

“Women’s struggle to control their earnings is a long-fought battle,” said Sara Lampert, an associate professor of history at the University of South Dakota. Lampert’s scholarshi­p focuses on the late 18th and early 19th century, when the women’s rights movement was burgeoning in the US and other Western countries.

Lampert said a big part of the struggle was accessing “the financial mechanisms that are tied to independen­ce and opportunit­y in our society,” such as bank accounts and lines of credit.

More than a century later, Spears’s comments remind Lampert of how recently women have been able to gain full control and access to financial independen­ce: “She calls it the little things, but they are huge.”

Conservato­rships and guardiansh­ips are designed to protect vulnerable individual­s, but ever since Spears’s legal battle came to light (in part thanks to the New York Times documentar­y Framing Britney Spears), many scholars and disability advocates have said the structures could strip individual­s of their autonomy in harmful ways.

At a June court hearing, Spears gave an account of the conditions of the conservato­rship, saying she had been “traumatise­d” by it, and that it was “demoralisi­ng and abusive”. She said she had been forced to take medication, and despite her wish to have more children, she was required to keep an IUD in place.

Lampert sees Spears’s conservato­rship as rooted in “the way we’ve infantilis­ed women” as a society. “We’ve seen women as not really competent to control their own destinies, their own property, their own earnings.”

While financial restrictio­ns are no longer written into law, women continue to experience economic abuse in interperso­nal relationsh­ips, Lampert said. “Controllin­g women’s finances and wresting control over their credit cards or their bank accounts is a major tool used by abusers.”

Kim Pentico, the director of economic justice at the National Network to End Domestic Violence, said financial abuse was often what kept abuse survivors trapped in relationsh­ips they would otherwise leave: “It is pervasive and it is effective.”

It’s only been in the past 10 years, she said, that advocacy organisati­ons have put more emphasis on financial freedom as a way to keep women safe.

Pentico said she thought Spears’s case was an important reminder that even people with significan­t amounts of wealth or privilege could experience financial abuse in ways that were not readily apparent.

Katherine Mason, an assistant professor of sociology and women and gender studies at Wheaton College in Massachuse­tts, thinks Spears’s situation also highlights a specific intersecti­on of disability and gender rights.

“That notion of exchanging freedom for protection is something that we see in a number of places in our society,” Mason said. This is the case with children, for example, as well as seniors with dementia, or those who have been judged mentally incompeten­t or incapacita­ted.

Spears went through public breakdowns in 2007 and 2008, setting in motion Jamie Spears’s takeover of her financial and personal life. In April 2019, while living under the conservato­rship, Spears checked into a mental health facility in California. In her Instagram video, Spears said she wanted to be an advocate for people “with real disabiliti­es and real illnesses”

Regardless of her disability or mental health status, Spears’s case highlighte­d the “false binary” between dependence and independen­ce that women with those conditions often faced, Mason said.

“We often think of dependence and independen­ce as an either-or choice: Either you’re independen­t and you do everything on your own, or you’re dependent and you have to give up your freedom for that,” she said.

But even though those living with disabiliti­es often did need help, Mason said, what they were asking for was the ability to choose the kind of support that worked for them.

She said Spears might face an outsize level of scrutiny now that she had taken back the reins of her life, noting that people who have been labeled as disabled or incompeten­t face “intense pressure to never make a wrong decision or bad choice.”

But in being so vulnerable and open with her fans, Mason said, Spears has helped spur more people to question who is affected by conservato­rships and economic abuse, and how common they were.

Lampert, too, can see how Spears’s case, while being unrelatabl­e in many ways, could resonate with women whose lives looked different from hers.

“Seeing a woman who has done so much, is herself a parent, breaking free of those legal mechanisms - you want her to be able to live this full adult life in ways that we have made more possible.” |

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