Barbie Doll Essay

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    Barbie dolls are trying to improve their race representation by creating more diverse Barbies so that little girls of different ethnicities don’t feel left out. According to Kristina Milnor, “between 1993 and 1997 the American toy company Mattel produced the “Great Eras Collection,” a series of Barbie dolls dressed to represent historical moments ranging from Eighteenth-Dynasty pharaonic Egypt through 1920s America” (215). Mattel released ten different Barbies in the Great Eras Collection in hopes

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    Barbie Doll Essay

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    Anna Middleton Professor Stowe IAH 201 November 12, 2017 The National Impact of Barbie Dolls on Young Girls Beauty standards differ around the world. In the Maasai tribes of Africa, having piercings and colorful intricate jewelry is considered beautiful. In China, women try and avoid sunlight in hopes of having the lightest, fairest skin. In Mexico, it is considered beautiful to have long black wavy hair. However, the standard of beauty that seems to be consistent around the world is having a thin

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    The newest Barbie doll just came out and I am freaking out. I am in elementary school and still obsessed with tiaras and shiny things. I want the new doll with straight blonde hair and a skinny waist. The doll is beautiful. I play with my other dolls at home as I listen to my grandmother oogle over my curly brown hair and chubby cheeks. “Look at that beautiful girl” she says as I make my dolls go shopping. The other adults sitting around the table agree and make other comments. “Pure beauty

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    Marge Percy “Barbie Doll” is a social commentary about the demanding pressures that the mass media produces about how women should look like and what type of body they should have. Women in the 1970s faced high standards and these standards still go on to this day. These high demands lead women to go above and beyond to meet standards that society has placed upon them. Some of these drastic measures can lead to consequences. In “Barbie Doll” the main character decided to undergo plastic surgery

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    Barbie Doll by Marge Piercy is a poem that highlights the difficulties that young girls, adolescents, and woman are confronted by society. There are many interpretations of the ending of the poem. Two of which are suicide and plastic surgery. Most people believe the child committed suicide because of the intense pressure of trying to be the perfect image like the Barbie doll. Although the poem has a depressing tone, the poem itself brings out legitimate points. Barbie has been the icon for more

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    desires. According to that archaic proverb, beauty is in the eye of the beholder. It’s ironic how we hear and repeat this phrase all the time yet we don’t practice what we preach. A good example of this can be found with the popularity of the Barbie fashion doll. Something as simple as a piece of plastic with fake hair, exaggerated body features, and miniature outfits can instill in young girls across the world the “standard of beauty”. With this fragile, impressionable persona that we have engrained

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    ideas. In “The Boy” and “Barbie Doll” the topic of gender roles displayed through imagery, repetition, and simile, by highlighting the appearances and expectations of males and females. From the moment the sex of a child is determined, people begin associating ideas and objects to that sex. If it is a girl many will buy pink clothes and imagine her in a ballet class. If it is a boy they will buy blue clothes and picture him as a football player. In both “The Boy” and “Barbie Doll” the authors address

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    concerning their appearance. The poem “Barbie Doll” by Marge Piercy demonstrates the cruelty that women of all ages face when they cannot fit into society standards and how it can be damaging to them. Piercy describes an image of a normal girl child who goes through puberty and gets made fun of her changes in appearance. She describes her as “usual” to emphasize she was born like any other normal child (line 1). The succeeding lines show that she played with “dolls that did pee-pee and miniature GE

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    The Positive and Negative Effects of Barbie Dolls in Society All around our world we are constantly being told what we should act and be like for females and males. Barbie was born on March 9, 159 in the American International Toy Fair in New York. The Barbie doll has been influencing young girls ever since she was born. The Barbie doll have a huge influence on the way that girls perceive their role in society and also on the way they develop. Barbie dolls in some way reflect and influence our

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    In the poem entitled “Barbie Doll” by Marge Piercy, a feminist, wrote this poem in 1973, which is around the time of the Feminist Movement. The poem has a total of four stanzas and no rhyme scheme, so it would be considered a free or blank verse poem. There are two main themes. The first theme is the overwhelming need to be attractive and be perfect in the eyes of society and the want to live up to or exceed the expectations of others and the second is that the poem is basically an imitation of social

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