Some of my Barbies |
I had all types of dolls. I had baby dolls to play Mommy and
Barbies to play Grown Up. I had Julia, the African-American nurse from the TV Show Julia's character. Even though the character was a widow, I borrowed my neighbor's GI Joe when Julia needed a date. I entertained myself with Barbie and friends well into my teen
years. And alas, when I had to give her up along came the doll house of doll
houses—the Barbie Dream House. Lucky for me I had nieces who had their own
share of Barbies. So, when they got a
Barbie Dream House I could play along under the guise of playing with
them—wink, wink--much like those of you who are dragging kids to the movies so you can see the remake of the Wizard of Oz.
I’ve followed the backlash against Barbie--women who refused
to let their daughters play with Barbie because of her unrealistic body
measurements, and women of color who didn’t allow their daughters playing with
white Barbies—all of which is supposedly tied to self-esteem and body image. Then
there was the recent Face book campaign to push Mattel to make a bald Barbie to
appeal to those young girls have lost their hair to cancer or alopecia. I
understand the criticism against Barbie as an adult, but as a child, Barbie was
simply Barbie. I played with Barbie and I don't think I suffered any damage to my self-esteem because of my doll play.
This Barbie-under fire concept is akin to the feminist rejection of girls' infatuation with Princesses, and while I get the ideology behind the not wanting our girls to be damsels in distress waiting for a man to rescue them, I have mixed feelings about it. But I'll save my thoughts on that for another time. Today is about Barbie.
Barbie is no stranger to controversy as it is something that
has followed her from the beginning. When she debuted, she was a departure from
the baby doll and represented a different kind of woman who didn’t have to
settle for being a homemaker and mom. Barbie was single, childless and very
much independent. Barbie was and is me.
Like Barbie, I neither married nor had children. And the
substantial sized rack held up by the small back, and the small waistline is
definitely me. Over the years, I always wondered why Barbie had everything but
a good bra. Sure, she has some cutesy lingerie, but a bra that lifts and
separates is not to be found among everything Barbie. But I understand. As a
woman who looks like Barbie from the waist up, I know how hard is to find a bra
that fits and perhaps that is why Barbie doesn’t have one, but more realistically because
unlike me—she doesn’t need one. She is the first of her kind with a boob job,
so hey! there you go.
Even now, I still have an affinity for Barbie as evidenced
by the collection of Black Barbies fighting for space in my house. And I’m not
the only one. There are Barbie dolls for adult collectors with numerous of sights for collectors to buy and sale Barbies. I recently
watched a clip of Barbie Man , a man in Florida who
owns more than 2000 Barbies! Barbie has been around for a while, and with so much that comes and goes, it's nice to be able to hold onto a piece of something that marked the innocence of my childhood.
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