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Self Image Wrapped In Plastic

– Now Available Essay, Research Paper


Girls can be whatever they want to be, as long as they are sexy when


they grow up. This is


the message the ever-so-popular Barbie doll has been pushing on America?s youth


since 1959.


When Barbie first hit the market, the creator, Ruth Handler, stated that she


wanted to make the


perfect role model for her children, Barbie and Ken. Parents everywhere ripped


open their wallets,


stampeded to the stores, and ate the concept up. They wanted their daughters to


be just like


Barbie Roberts. They even wanted their sons to bring her home. Today, the only


difference made


to this bizarre idea, is that the doll?s family has grown. Now Asian, Hawaiian,


African American,


Swedish, and other cultures and races of females, can share in the joys of low


self image. The


expectations the doll places on children are intangible. My family showered me


with these plastic


beauties on every special occasion. My birthday, Easter, and Christmas, I would


be found in a


corner unwrapping another years worth of expectations.


Barbie was unleashed to the world in a revealing bathing suit, wearing


makeup, and fully


accessorized. Her with ruby red lips, plucked eye brows, and cute little pony


tail became the icon


of young American girls. She had everything, knew everything, and could do


anything. She didn?t


go to school, never had a bad hair day, and had no need for ?hand me downs?.


She always had


someone to play with, and a boyfriend by her side.


We were playing with a doll that had an ideal body. We could never have


this body, and


yet we could not wait to grow up and develop the enormous breasts we would be


seeing


throughout our childhood. Her clothes wrapped snugly around her tiny waist, and


long legs,


attached with painfully arched, perfect feet. I remember asking my mother why


she didn?t have


shiny hair like Barbie. I thought she had something wrong with her. There must


have been


something wrong with the bodies, and hair of all the women in my family. They


could have chosen


to look like Barbie, I thought. It has been a proven fact that her proportions


could never humanly


be possible. If she were the actual size of a human teenage girl, she would look


quite unusual. She


would stand seven feet tall, with body measurements of 37? in bust, 20? in


w

aist, and 25? in hips.


Barbie would not be able to play any sports, if she could walk at all. She had


no stomach or


buttocks, and left no room for body fat of any kind. Little girls to not know


these facts. I find it


alarming that Mattel, the company that mass-produces her, chose to place huge


mounds for


breasts on her chest. She is supposed to be a young teenage girl. I would


imagine that, if it were


possible for this to happen by nature, it would be very painful. They could have


saved a fortune if


they reduced the size. It must have been intended. I don?t have any doubt that


if she were


marketed in an erotic store, no one would question her being there. Robert A.


Eckert is chairman


of the board and chief executive officer of Mattel, Inc., a worldwide leader in


the design,


manufacture and marketing of family products with .5 billion in annual revenues.


He is an


American male. I wonder if this may contribute to the exploitation.


Barbie?s details changed with the times, however her expectations, and


body remained the


same. The Barbie people imagine today has long flowing blonde hair and blue


eyes. She is always


happy, even though her back must still be breaking due to her large bust. I


wonder if the


stereotypical ideal woman in America came from this doll?s image. I have never


seen Debbie the


Disabled doll, or Fay the Fat bellied doll. If you researched different races in


the world, you would


notice that all races have different bone structures, and hair types. For one


example, the placement


of the eyes, and broadness of the nose are different between Caucasoid humans


and African


humans. In the Barbie line, all the dolls have the same features, except for


color. This example


may add to distortions in the self image of African girls who play with the


African Barbie dolls.


I have noticed that all women in my life suffer from a lower self image


than men. We


were all raised with the media, dolls, and parents who placed high expectations


on our lives. We


strive to look beautiful by considering breast implants, liposuction, and


spending large amounts of


money on form enhancing wardrobes. My concern is the acceptance her figure is


receiving, even


in present times. Barbie did not create this problem, but she is one of the only


long standing


reminders today.

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