Analyzing Marge Piercy's 'Barbie Doll'

722 Words2 Pages

Margaret Duguid
Professor Amy Robinson
Introduction to Literature 602
21 October 2014
Back to Being Plastic
The poem “Barbie Doll” by Marge Piercy is an embodiment of insecurity. She points out that society wants young women to look and act a certain way and the poem is basically using sarcasm to point out just how superficial and unachievable perfection really is. “Barbie Doll” has a dark tone, but real. The perfect ideals of society force the girlchild to change and hate herself to the point of death being the only way achieve beauty and perfection. In this passage, Piercy uses sarcasm, similes, and descriptions of the physical attributes of womanhood and femininity to emphasize the larger theme of society’s view of perfection, which lines in the superficial appearance of women. …show more content…

In lines 17 and 18, the speaker says that the girlchild “cut off her nose and her legs/ and offered them up” (Piercy 17). She decides that she should get rid of her flaws and imperfections, no matter if it kills her. The speaker is showing that society is pressuring her to change herself because she isn’t perfect in their eyes. In the final stanza, the speaker uses more disturbing imagery to show how looks-centric society is. From lines 19 to 20, the speaker says that the girlchild lay displayed in the casket on satin “with the caretaker’s cosmetics painted on” (Piercy 20). Even in death, she cannot escape being made up to look how society wants her to look. She is displayed similar the dolls she got as a child. The girlchild is portrayed as inhuman. The speaker uses the word "painted" in line 20 to impress the idea that the girlchild is a kind of doll with a painted on face. In lines 21 to 22, the speaker also says that she got “a turned-up putty nose,/ [and was] dressed in a pink and white nightie” (Piercy 534). In death, the girlchild achieves the perfection that had destroyed her in

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