Stereotypes In Marge Piercy's Barbie Doll

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In real life, a Barbie Doll would be five feet six inches tall, with a size two waist, and size two hips. The measurement are impossible. A woman with those measurements would have trouble standing and going about her daily life. “The Barbie doll has become part of the American psyche and it sets unrealistic standards for the female body” (Chamberlain 1). Young girls grow up with Barbie Dolls in hands, dreaming of the day that they’ll be grown and look like the doll they hold so dearly. Some girls fight the stereotypes, they resist. Inevitably they grow weary, fighting societies pressures is not an easy battle. Thus they give up, and live to please society. The poem “Barbie Doll” by Marge Piercy shows how expectations put upon women in their …show more content…

Even in death, women are made to look a certain way. In the last stanza, the protagonist lays in her coffin, finally at rest. The first half says "in the casket displayed on satin she lay with the undertaker's cosmetics painted on, a turned-up putty nose, dressed in a pink and white nightie”(Piercy). In death she was made to look like something she wasn’t, “painted” with makeup. Her nose was not “fat” like it once was, but it was a “turned-up putty nose”(Piercy), something she was pressured into doing her entire life. She was dressed like a barbie doll, in a stereotypical pink dress. This is not normal funeral wear, and symbolizes that in death she is finally pretty, like a Barbie Doll. The next half of the stanza “Doesn't she look pretty? everyone said. Consummation at last. To every woman a happy ending”(Piercy). The mood in these last few sentences changes, to that of irony and sarcasm. She is finally done protesting, and only in death, made up with makeup and a putty nose is she seen as “pretty”(Piercy) in society's eyes. The word consummation holds a deep meaning, she is the one finished. She has been consumed by society. The funeral attendees who say “consummation at last” really mean to say that now she is dead, she is fit to their standards, plastic. When Piercy says “to every woman a happy ending”(Piercy) it is irony. Only in death, does society see women as beautiful. The woman cannot protest this, cannot fight the expectations and pressures that are thrust upon them in death. The outfits, the makeup, it is all decided for

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