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Salute
when you see her...
Mattel's Barbie® Enlists
Military
women have often endured a negative public image.
Until recently, women who joined the military
acted counter to cultural expectations of their appropriate place
in society as girlfriends, wives and mothers. As a result, male
military personnel and civilians frequently stereotyped servicewomen
as masculine, morally loose and worst of allincapable of attracting
a man to marry.
The Mattel Corporation's Barbie® doll experienced
negative press of a different sort. Criticized for excessive emphasis
on clothing, exaggerated physical attributes and empty-headedness,
Barbie has, nonetheless, served as a leader in career paths for
young women. She's held at least 80 jobs since her debut in 1959,
was the first woman astronaut in 1965 and ran for president in 2000.
In 1989, Barbie joined the Army; in 1990, the
Air Force. A year later, she joined the Navy and then, in 1992,
the Marines. Her uniformsranging from battle dress uniform
(BDU) to formal military dresswere approved by the Pentagon.
And while her accessories don't include a fighter
jet, she does own a jeep, and her presence in the US Armed Forces
validates the acceptance and the importance of women in the military
to millions of young women.
During the 1990s,
the average American girl between the ages of three and ten, owned
eight Barbie dolls.
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