Saturday, February 8, 2014

Are we done with Barbie bashing?


Barbie is after all, merely a toy!

I wish people would stop criticizing Barbie.

I used to love playing with her. She was such a big part of the first 7 years of my childhood and I have some very good memories of playing with her

I didn't notice her perfect figure and I am sure it had nothing to do with my body image. ( That I entirely attribute to movies, magazines and media AND my low self esteem as a teen. ) I feel that blaming the Barbie for body image issues is a little extreme.

You forget that the barbie has been a pilot, president, doctor among other professions. I know her figure is a topic of controversy- a thin waist, big boobs; her figure is certainly not very “real”. There are many things children play with that do not correspond with real life. And that is the whole point! It’s not real! It was never supposed to be. It’s a toy for God’s sake!

I have a problem with outrage at everything. Or maybe it is my attachment to barbie that is making me biased. I am open to a conversation.

How a kid perceive a toy ( or anything) depends on the individual.


 I feel the nature/nurture argument plays a definite role here. I grew up in a relatively equal environment. I didn’t face any discrimination based on gender at my home front. My parents gave me the choice to choose the toys I wanted to play with. I had constructions sets AND barbies. Toy trains AND kitchen sets. I had gender neutral toys (Most toys available then were gender neutral, this pink/blue things is a recent trend.) I have educative toys.
I experimented with my Barbie, I colored their hair black with my marker; I made them kiss each other ( didn't know anything about LGBT at that point, though.) I forced my mom to stitch clothes for them. Playing with barbies, making up stories fueled my imagination. So don’t dismiss barbies just yet.



 Exposure to unrealistic beauty standards is  harmful.   


I am not claiming to be an expert on how much of a role Barbie has to play in this. I just feel that maybe we’re reading too much into a simple doll that gave (and gives ) so much joy to so many kids out there.


So here’s my foolish request. No it’s a plea. ( I know it won’t change anything, but still) Please stop with the barbie bashing, already!





P. S : I scoured the Internet (sort of) and found many articles about the barbie controversy. If you hate barbie and want it banned from toysphere here's one for you Barbie bashing. And here's one here too. 

And if you're a former Barbie fan girl like me here's one for you- Barbie loving and here's one here too. 

4 comments :

  1. As a kid I loved Barbie's..... I still have a few of them safely placed in my showcase. :)

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    1. i don't have my barbies but I still have a few of my soft toys :)

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  2. I relate completely. As a child, my toy-universe consisted of stuffed animals, GI Joes, trains, Lego sets, kitchen sets and many other varieties. They all lived equally happily in my head. I still don't see Barbie any different from the other toys. If my future children (daughters or sons) want to play with a doll like Barbie, I don't see any reason why I should stop them. Yes, I would keep a check if the toys they played with had a negative impact on them as people, but nothing more. If Barbie is the sole source of giving young kids body-image issues, then action-figures should be giving them false assurances about violence too.

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    1. Exactly! I hate it when everything is over-analysed!

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