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Barbie's Queer Accessories (Series Q)
 
 
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Barbie's Queer Accessories (Series Q) [Paperback]

Erica Rand (Author)

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Book Description

082231620X 978-0822316206 April 25, 1995
She’s skinny, white, and blond. She’s Barbie—an icon of femininity to generations of American girls. She’s also multiethnic and straight—or so says Mattel, Barbie’s manufacturer. But, as Barbie’s Queer Accessories demonstrates, many girls do things with Barbie never seen in any commercial. Erica Rand looks at the corporate marketing strategies used to create Barbie’s versatile (She’s a rapper! She’s an astronaut! She’s a bride!) but nonetheless premolded and still predominantly white image. Rand weighs the values Mattel seeks to embody in Barbie—evident, for example, in her improbably thin waist and her heterosexual partner—against the naked, dyked out, transgendered, and trashed versions favored by many juvenile owners and adult collectors of the doll.
Rand begins by focusing on the production and marketing of Barbie, starting in 1959, including Mattel’s numerous tie-ins and spin-offs. These variations, which include the much-promoted multiethnic Barbies and the controversial Earring Magic Ken, helped make the doll one of the most profitable toys on the market. In lively chapters based on extensive interviews, the author discusses adult testimony from both Barbie "survivors" and enthusiasts and explores how memories of the doll fit into women’s lives. Finally, Rand looks at cultural reappropriations of Barbie by artists, collectors, and especially lesbians and gay men, and considers resistance to Barbie as a form of social and political activism.
Illustrated with photographs of various interpretations and alterations of Barbie, this book encompasses both Barbie glorification and abjection as it testifies to the irrefutably compelling qualities of this bestselling toy. Anyone who has played with Barbie—or, more importantly, thought or worried about playing with Barbie—will find this book fascinating.


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Customers buy this book with Body Outlaws: Rewriting the Rules of Beauty and Body Image (Live Girls) $10.62

Barbie's Queer Accessories (Series Q) + Body Outlaws: Rewriting the Rules of Beauty and Body Image (Live Girls)


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Have you ever dressed Barbie in Ken's clothes or let her sleep with Skipper? If so, consider yourself an accessory to the crime of liberating Barbie from her conformist, straight world. Describing herself as a dyke cultural critic and political activist, university teacher Rand examines how consumer interactions with Barbie affect and reflect their political, social, and gender identities. She contrasts owners' recollections of what they thought about and did to their Barbies with the conventional characteristics and socially approved uses promoted by the doll's corporate manufacturer, Mattel. Speaking from an alternative viewpoint, Rand shows how adult reinterpretations and subversions of white, blond, straight Barbie (for additional examples see Lucinda Ebersole and Pichard Peabody's Mondo Barbie, St. Martin's Pr., 1993) become forms of resistance to disempowering and discriminatory cultural messages. Recommended for academic libraries and scholars of popular cultural and gay or women's studies.?Carol A. McAllister, Swem Lib., Coll. of William and Mary. Williamsburg, Va.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Over the course of the 1980s, Barbie has become an artist’s model, a collector’s ‘fetish,’ and, as Erica Rand shows us, an object of collective and personal memory. Barbie’s Queer Accessories will help to open up important issues about queer readings in relationship to one of the most feminine coded objects of contemporary culture."—Lynn Spigel, author of Make Room for TV: Television and the Family Ideal in Postwar America

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Like Barbie, who comes with several conflicting myths of origin that seem at once to explain everything and nothing-The Devoted Mom Who Wanted a Fashion Doll for Her Daughter, The Inventor Who Also Helped Design the Sparrow and Hawk Missiles and Later Married Zsa Zsa Gabor, and The U.S. Entrepreneurs Who Realized They Could Market a German Sex-Symbol Doll to Children-this book has several telling, if partial, founding tales. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
fantasy catalyst, queer accessories, consumer testimony, verbal nudge, consumer interpretation, queer moments, toy shelves, artistic intention
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Ruth Handler, Barbie Bazaar, African American, New York, Hard Copy, Billy Boy, Dream Loft, King Mondo, Soft Targets, Barbie's Hawaiian Holiday, United States, Burroughs Wellcome, Chicana Barbie, Day-to-Night Barbie, Jay York, The Size, Turn Barbie, Bee Bell, Quick-To-See Smith, Barbie's Big Prom, Barbie's Fashion Success, Biker Dyke Barbie, Doctor Barbie, Kinky Ken, Sri Lanka
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Back Cover | Surprise Me!
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Story of Barbie by Kitturah B. Westenhouser
 

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