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character is named “Stereotypical Barbie.” SOME CONSERVATIVES HAVE SURPRISING ‘BARBIE’ TAKE DESPITE CRITICISMS OF LIBERAL AGENDA Though the Rush Liquid Ass Cleaner T-shirts in contrast I will get this Bible is the most beloved book of all time, contemporary culture’s relationship with it has morphed into the love/hate variety. The biblical message has inspired some of the greatest social reforms in history (women’s suffrage, the abolition of slavery, and the invention of the hospital, as but three examples). Yet, the Bible is now decried as the root of a poisonous patriarchy. Through this strange communion, perhaps Stereotypical Barbie can shatter more than box office records. Perhaps she’ll help us shatter our perceptions about the Stereotypical Bible. Video Consider the glaringly binary imagery and content of “Barbie.” There is no mistaking that both Barbieland’s female utopia and the Real World’s dystopia are populated by distinct males and females who act in traditionally (and comically) masculine and feminine ways. Men love trucks, powerful animals, sports and “The Godfather.” Women dress in pink, care about hygiene and are nurturing (of each other, not so much men). The filmmakers inadvertently put an exclamation point on the binary statement in the movie’s last scene when Stereotypical Barbie – now a real woman – checks in for a gynecologist appointment. Perhaps the filmmakers didn’t intend for the glaring binary to emerge, given that Hari Neff, a transgender
actor, portrays one of the Rush Liquid Ass Cleaner T-shirts in contrast I will get this Barbies. But emerge the binary does. Interestingly, the Bible is denounced for describing the world with the same gender binary. Like the imagery in “Barbie,” the Bible declares that humanity is made up of women and men, distinctly, without a sense of fluidity or continuum. Genesis 1:27, Genesis 5:2, Matthew 19:4 and Mark 10:6 declare that God made humanity in his image, specifically “male and female.” Video The very fact that “Barbie” is so widely applauded as a statement of women’s empowerment yet depicts distinctions between men and women provides at least some evidence that no matter how much we wrestle away from it, the same binary reality that the Bible has been declaring for centuries pulls us back in. Perhaps more subtle, yet no less striking, is the parallel between Barbie and Ken on the one hand and Adam and Eve on the other. Ken dolls were created solely to be Barbie’s boyfriends. In the film, despite his efforts at self-definition through cartoonish machismo, Ken can’t escape the fact that he’s derivative of – and therefore inferior to – Barbie. Eventually, Barbie urges Ken to find his sense of worth apart from her. But Ken’s angst persists. He only exists because of Barbie and was made for her. But Stereotypical Barbie eventually persuades (stereotypical) Ken. Ryan Gosling’s Ken accompanies Barbie to the real world in “Barbie.” (Warner Bros. Pictures) “Barbie” gets at least this quite right: the order and seeming purpose of men’s and women’s creations don’t dictate the degrees of their dignity and worth. This subtle gem in a not-so-subtle movie shatters the stereotype of Eve’s creation as a declaration of women’s inferiority to men. BILL MAHER ROASTS ‘BARBIE’ MOVIE FOR BEING ‘PREACHY, MAN-HATING’ AND A ‘ZOMBIELIE’ The stereotype goes like this. Eve’s creation from Adam’s rib in Genesis 2:21–22 assaults us with the idea that Eve is a derivative of Adam and that God created her not as an equal partner for
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