New Study Explores Butch Barbie and Gender Politics

King’s College London

The exclusion of butch representation in the Barbie movie limits its queer inclusivity, says new paper released in the year of the doll's 65th anniversary.

butch-barbie-dolls

Dr Clara Bradbury-Rance, Senior Lecturer in Gender and Sexuality Studies in the Department of Interdisciplinary Humanities, imagines how the film could be different if it featured a butch version of Barbie in a new paper published in Feminist Media Studies.

The film has many undeniable pleasures, including its celebration of femininity, its shameless camp aesthetic, and the could-be-lesbian chemistry between its leads. But there are clearly still barriers to queer and trans representability. I wanted to imagine what if there were a Butch Barbie to play with some of those barriers.

Dr Clara Bradbury-Rance, Senior Lecturer in Gender and Sexuality Studies

While Barbie (2023) celebrates women and campness, Dr Bradbury-Rance explores the movie's successful celebration of femininity alongside the limits of its gender politics, drawing on comparisons from queer cinema. She suggests that despite the film's camp aesthetic and LGBTQ+ cast, the lack of butch characters prevents the movie from successfully usurping traditional politics of gender and sexuality.

The publication of 'Butch Barbie' coincides with the 65th anniversary of Barbie, which was introduced in 1959.

The paper is available to read here.

In this story

Clara Bradbury-Rance

Senior Lecturer in Gender and Sexuality Studies

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