But We Do Still Need Fat Barbie.
Plus giant sandwiches, a more organized Indulgence Gospel and Fat Liberation Month!
Friday Thread: Where is Our Fat Liberation Barbie?
I’m seeing the Barbie movie tonight, with a bunch of local mom friends. We are wearing pink. I am preparing to LOVE it, wholly and unapologetically. As mentioned last week, I’m having a bit of a time. I need a night of hot pink feminist joy.
And yet—every time I see the memes and the trailers and Margot Robbie’s adorableness everywhere, I think: Looks like they forgot the fat politics.
This is both not a surprise and a perpetual annoyance. White feminism loves to forget about fat people, as well as Black and brown people and disabled people. Body positivity loves to forget about fat people, too. But it feels like a particularly sharp oversight here when Barbie’s body—and its clear opposition to fatness—has been the subject of decades of discourse and research and handwringing. As Jennifer Weiner wrote on Instagram this week:
The movie took on a lot, as it both upheld and subverted Barbie’s message, with a censorious toy company and a movie studio looking on, and I’m impressed with how much Greta Gerwig got away with. I just wanted a little more acknowledgement of how Barbie has been part of the problem before I was willing to see her as part of the solution.
And, as
notes that the movie doesn’t grapple very directly with white supremacy either:Can one movie be all the things and sponsored by Mattel? Probably not. And I don’t think it’s useful to ban Barbie. But I also don’t think that Curvy Barbie got us anywhere; if anything she was a setback. When researchers asked 84 girls aged 3 to 10 to assign positive or negative traits to different Barbies (original, tall, petite, and curvy), the kids identified Curvy Barbie as the one they least wanted to play with, according to this 2019 study.
Also a setback: The press release that landed twice (twice!) in my inbox this week, subject line: Searches for 'Margot Robbie diet' EXPLODE by 1364% following the Barbie movie. Cool, great, amazing. The press release goes on to describe what an expert thinks Robbie’s diet is or should be, despite this person being completely unaffiliated with her or the movie. Please, if you’re going to diet, don’t base your meal plan off what you think a human pretending to be a doll would eat?
But I’m willing to hold space for all of the nuances here. So let’s discuss: If you’ve seen the movie, how do you think it handled bodies and fatness (if at all)? If you haven’t, why aren’t you going?
I’d also love to know how you talked about the movie (and it’s fat politics or lack thereof) with any kids in your life. And if you have general Barbie Body Stories to share, we’re here for it.
I’ll tell you one Fat Barbie I am very here for is this excellent downloadable illustration by the great Taynee Tinsley. I already own two of her prints and might need this one too.
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Friday Links & Recs
No matter what happens with Trump (which we cannot control), Virginia will either ban abortion next year, or not. It will come down to a tiny margin of votes and 2 seats in the legislature. That's what the Burnt Toast Giving Circle is fighting for this November. Join us! Donations are getting matched up to $200K until August 14.
A bit of housekeeping: Corinne had the idea to give our Indulgence Gospel episodes their own page on the Substack. They are still listed in the main podcast archives, of course, but if you’re specifically looking for a question we answered1 or just craving a Corinne/Virginia comfort listen, we got you.
Obsessed with this giant sandwich party idea from
What don’t we talk about when we talk about luxury food and luxury real estate? Poverty.
Love this smart analysis of the bias in research on kids and bariatric surgery.
I want validation for an unscheduled week, dear God yes.
What do we do about the rampant fatphobia in fiction?
Am now that friend dropping random (and I would say mind-blowing) Laura Ingalls Wilder facts into conversation thanks to this brilliance from Glynnis MacNicol and
:Happy Fat Liberation Month! NAAFA has a cool list of events happening. Support their work here.