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T O D A Y


What's It all about, Barbie?
Introducing Salon's special Barbie supplement

Banned in Vermont
Birkenstock moms savage the bodacious blonde

The littlest harlot
Tracy Quan explains why Barbie is a role model for hookers

My Barbie, myself
Camille Paglia, Cintra Wilson and others recall intimate Barbie moments

The skinny on Barbie
Fun Facts about America's doll wonder!

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T A B L E++T A L K

What is the truth about giving birth? Does it hurt like hell? Share your pain in Table Talk.

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R E C E N T L Y

"Just because I'm HIV-positive, can't I bear children?
By Lori Leibovich
Should a 38-year-old, HIV-positive ex-drug addict have a baby? Patti Radigan thought so -- and a pioneering San Francisco clinic agreed to help her
(11/25/97)

Reluctant role model
By Susan McCarthy
My classmates wanted to hear how easy it is to combine kids and graduate school
(11/24/97)

Coyote dreams
By Cynthia Romanov
Peter Coyote rescued me from a miserable divorce
(11/21/97)

Cujo's bite is worse than his bark
By Anne Lamott
The main pleasure in owning a pit bull is in detonating a sense of fear in your neighbors
(11/20/97)

Escape from parenting
By Ariel Gore
New York City turns a responsible mama into a reckless adolescent
(11/19/97)

Toying with us
By Albert Mobilio
Dissecting kids' lust for loot
(11/18/97)

ARCHIVES

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Mamafesto
Why it's time
for Mothers Who Think

BARBIE BANNED IN VERMONT! | PAGE 2 OF 2



        I had no trouble passing for a conscientious parent until two years
ago, when a serious Barbie gaffe occurred right in my home. A mother in the
neighborhood we had just moved into stopped
by to introduce herself.  As her daughter and my daughter, Anna, played
upstairs, we self-righteously bashed another pet evil, Disney.  Never, we
clucked, would we expose our children to such commercialism, such violence,
such Technicolor.

"Look!" my new friend's daughter suddenly burst in as she thrust forward a hot-pink plastic case that exuded Barbie. "Look what Anna has!"

I cannot adequately describe the smirk that appeared on my new friend's face at that moment. I can only tell you that I felt like a hooker who had stumbled upon a PTA meeting. Thank God she didn't find the Oreos in my cupboard.

From that day forward Barbie was an underlying template of tension in our friendship. All her daughter wanted to do at our house was play Barbie. Ground rules were drawn. Anna was not to bring Barbies to her friend's house. It would be best if Barbie were "put away" when the friend came over. They could play with Barbie, but they couldn't change her clothes. "No Barbies please" was scrawled across the child's sixth birthday invitation.

I should note that Barbie boycotts are hardly a new concept to mothers. According to M.G. Lord's definitive book "Forever Barbie," Mattel's early marketing studies showed that disapproving mothers felt that playing with such an adult doll might give their sweet little daughters adult ideas. My mother refused to buy me a Barbie when I pined for one 30 years ago.

By age 6, I was obsessed. I would devour the Sears Christmas catalog. Malibu Barbie. Barbie Camper. Barbie Dream House. At last an older brother -- who is now, tellingly, a creative art director for an advertising agency -- bought me a Barbie. He also got me the Corvette and a Barbie house and taught me the fine art of Barbie torture -- from sending her speeding into walls to using her as a shot put. We called her Barbie Astronaut.

Those memories kicked in one day a year or so ago after what would be the last Barbie conversation I had with my friend. As she was serving French-roast coffee from beans picked by adequately compensated farmers in a Latin American cooperative, she suggested that perhaps it would be best if we banned even Barbie's name from the children's conversation.

The seriousness on the face of this otherwise intelligent woman struck me. How had this 11-and-a-half-inch piece of hardened plastic assumed such a gigantic role in our parenting strategy, in our daily thoughts? If Barbie were a living woman, I wanted to tell her, she'd be unemployed with chronic back pain from walking on her toes all day! She'd be weak from malnutrition and so vapid that pencil sharpening would be a challenge!

"Barbie Unbound" was born that day.

It was time, I decided, to test Barbie's grace under pressure; time for this cultural icon of perfected femininity to endure the tougher trials of womanhood -- menopause, child rearing, rejection, sexism, weight gain -- and see how well she managed. By that afternoon I had come up with a play guide for putting Barbie into new and exciting roles. PMS Barbie. Barbie d'Arc. Overweight Adolescent Outcast Barbie. Tailhook Barbie. Barbie DeGeneres and midge d. lang. Barbie Plath.

Staging her liberation in "Barbie Unbound" was no easy task, however. For Virginia Slims Barbie Dates Tobacco Lawyer Ken, my husband, Charlie, and I spent nights rolling miniature Barbie cigarettes to fit into the newer Barbie's finger ring holes (created, presumably, for her engagement to Ken). My daughter watched in horror as Charlie whipped up a tiny guillotine for Barbie Antoinette and began severing heads. I had to get up at dawn one morning to paste brown hair on the legs and armpits of Co-Op Barbie.

Now "Barbie Unbound" is out in bookstores in my town. Yet neither that nor Mattel's recent announcement of a new line of fatter, hippier Barbies has as yet appeased the people in Montpelier. "Ah, Mattel just wants to sell more clothes," remarked one local resident, flipping through the book the other day. "She's still Barbie."
SALON | Nov. 26, 1997

Sarah Strohmeyer is a freelance writer and newspaper reporter. She lives in Vermont with her husband and two children.



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