Anonymous wrote:While the last generation or so revolted against Barbie, I think they fixated on the wrong things and completely missed the critically important positive impact the Barbie doll made on girls. Hear me out.
Barbie was launched at a time when the only dolls available were baby dolls. Generations of girls were limited to dolls and related toys that fostered gendered stereotypes of playing house and preparing for a life of motherhood and housework.
Barbie wasn’t a wife or mother. Barbie was living her best life as a presumably wealthy single lady! Her boyfriend was an afterthought, and he didn’t have a career, house, or car.
Barbie on the other hand was a doctor, lawyer, president, etc. She was everything because she could be anything.
And she never married or had kids. She didn’t need to.
That’s the impact she made at a time when the only other dolls and toys for girls were baby dolls with diapers, bottles, kitchens, etc.
Barbie shifted the narrative.
As a Gen Xer who grew up with Barbie, I couldn’t agree any more.
I knew my Barbie dolls had picture perfect bodies and I was also smart enough to know that no one had a body like that in real life….
Because Barbie was a toy.
Plain & simple.
She was a fantasy.
I thought Miss Piggy had great cleavage yet I NEVER COMPARED myself to her.