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PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Review
of Body Outlaws
Edut, founder and publisher of the magazine
HUES, has assembled a collection of the freshest, hippest writers
ever to slam Mattel's Barbie doll and speak up for the beauty
of the un-blonde, the un-tall and the un-anorexic. Addressing
everything you always wanted to know about body image, from
leg hair to transexuals and African American women's posteriors,
the more than 25 contributors present a spectrum of the attitudes
toward the female body. Although a few of the essays are weak
when compared to the book's best pieces, the volume as a whole
is a step forward in the discussion of how feminine attractiveness
is viewed in American society, concluding that women must seek
their own definition of beauty in order to gain a sense of
self-acceptance. Essays such as Susan Jane Gilman's "Klaus
Barbie, and Other Dolls I'd Like to See" and Graciela
Rodriguez's "Breaking the Model" provide insight
into the challenges of young women who grew up feeling as if
they had to compete with the pert and impossibly perfect Barbie.
Other pieces, such as "My Jewish Nose" by Lisa Jervis
and "My Brown Face" by Mira Jacobs, illuminate the
obstacles in trying to emulate a Caucasian appearance. Every
writer in this splendid collection raises a different issue,
yet the essays address the same theme and, cumulatively make
for compelling and important reading.
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