[18] Mattel said that the waist of the Barbie doll was made small because the waistbands of her clothes‚ along with their seams‚ snaps‚ and zippers‚ added bulk to her figure.[19] In 1997‚ Barbie’s body mold was redesigned and given a wider waist‚ with Mattel saying that this would make the doll better suited to contemporary fashion designs.[20][21] "Colored Francie" made her debut in 1967‚ and she is sometimes described as the first African American Barbie doll. However‚ she was produced using the
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Barbie: The Bitch Has Everything? On eBay‚ a bidder can purchase a pink license plate frame that says‚ “I want to be Barbie. The bitch has everything.” Barbie appears to have the perfect body‚ Ken‚ her handsome boyfriend‚ a multitude of careers ranging from a teacher to an astronaut‚ and an endless wardrobe with all the accessories. But a close examination of Barbie may reveal that she does not have everything. Mattel’s Barbie doll has enjoyed a long and profitable history. Invented by
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pretty to everyone’s eyes. Marge Piercy is an American poet‚ novelist‚ and social activist. Many of her most famous works include He‚ She‚ and It‚ Early Grrl‚ and The Moon is Always Female. Beauty Standards are one of the main themes in this poem. It is apparent throughout the entire text as Piercy portrays a young girl beaten down with expectations she cannot handle which in turn‚ brings about her suicide. “Consummation at last. To every woman a happy ending.” (Piercy‚ Line 24-25) At this point
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In "A Hanging"‚ Orwell has a sudden epiphany: the prisoner that he is escorting is going to die. He feels that it is wrong‚ even if the prisoner was sentenced to death. With Orwell’s phrasing he reminds us that the prisoner is fully functional‚ his "feet printed themselves on the wet gravel"‚ "muscles slid neatly into place"‚ and a "lock of hair on his scalp danced up and down"‚ but when he saw the prisoner avoid a puddle‚ just minutes before he was going to die he realized how wrong it is to "cut
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Goodkind’s literature resonated with one of my favorite quotes by Audre Lorde: “There is no thing as a single-issue struggle because we do not live single-issues lives." Goodkind and Lorde argue that individuals can hold multiple oppressions which intersect to produce varied experiences of discrimination or disempowering relations‚ and as a society‚ our issues intersect. I agree with the primary argument presented by author Goodkind. For example‚ the discrimination of black women in the workplace
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“Barbie Doll”: Is she society’s ideal woman‚ or just an intangible idea? Is Barbie the ideal woman? By the time most girls reach the age of four‚ they are given a Barbie Doll that they love and adore. Barbie is tall‚ skinny‚ big breasted‚ career oriented‚ a loving wife‚ a good friend‚ and fun loving girl all wrapped into one. These traits are exactly what our society praises in every woman and that every woman aspires to be. The effects‚ however‚ of trying to become the “ideal woman” may be
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The form relates to the content of the girl’s life issues. Lorde uses enjambment – run-on line to express the girl’s loneliness‚ the inability to talk to somebody; especially to her mother about her secrets‚ concerns and issues that she kept hidden so long. She wants other people to feel and understand her hardships that she has been through. Lorde chose free form because she wants to make the readers feel like the teenager girl and put themselves into
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In Liability‚ by Lorde develops the central conflict when you cause damage it’s your fault by using "Says he made the big mistake of dancing in my storm. Say it’s poison." But most of all maybe the breakup was her fault. She might’ve caused the problem because she’s famous which probably caused her to not spend enough time with her boyfriend. Lorde uses a metaphor to describe how her relationship was like in the past. (FIX) In fact‚ in Verse 1 she says‚ "I do my best to meet her standards
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In Sandra Cisneros’s "Barbie-Q"‚ a sudden abundance of flawed Barbie dolls makes the child narrator accepts her own identity and discards society’s ideals of women. The initial storyworld is that of materialism and perfection. What the narrator values in her dolls and what she plays with them could be seen as a reflection of her own self image‚ of what she thinks she should look like and what kind of life she should live. From the first few lines of the story it becomes clear that the narrator of
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Isidore E. Sharpe Professor Tracy Moore ENG 104: 20th Century African American Authors and Poets 31 August 2017 Mid-term Audrey Geraldine Lorde was also known by her African name‚ Gamba Adisa‚ which means "Warrior. Born on February 18‚ 1934‚ in a culturally-rich atmosphere of New York City. Audrey was the daughter of Caribbean immigrants who made their home in Harlem‚ New York. Harlem was not only a safe for Audrey and her family‚ but also became a safe haven for thousands of oppressed African-Americans
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