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Patriarchy According to The Barbie Movie

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    It's hard to overstate the massive
    cultural impact of the Barbie movie
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    "Hi Barbie"
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    "Hi Ken"
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    The film Enchanted audiences wowed critics
    sparked heated debates
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    and made a truly obscene amount of money
    at the box office
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    Barbie continues breaking records
    with over 1 billion dollars
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    at the global box office
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    It's an impressive cultural achievement,
    especially considering that the film
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    doubles as a feature-length commercial
    for a line of plastic dolls
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    There was however one group
    who were decidedly unenthusiastic
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    "Despite all the bubbly pink fun,
    the movie's become a target"
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    "of some right-wing personalities"
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    "They are preaching empowerment
    by making men look weak and dumb"
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    "Feminist (diet tribe?) about the evils of
    the modern patriarchy"
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    "It's a trojan horse to to teach girls
    daddy is really a dummy"
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    "or domineering idiots"
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    "It's feminist garbage and
    it's really about hating men"
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    And Ken is like stupid and unlikable"
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    "This is an assault on not just Ken,
    but all men"
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    If you've seen the movie
    you might be confused
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    Because the Barbie script goes
    out of it's way
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    to show Ken in a sympathetic light
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    If anything the movie might
    be a little too sympathetic to Ken
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    "I think I owe you an apology"
    "Huh?"
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    Now it's tempting to dismiss this
    clearly performative outrage
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    as just another attempt to fan the flame
    of the culture war
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    But there is something really poisonous
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    under-pinning this backlash
    that I do think is worth taking seriously
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    One word in particular
    seem to touch a nerve
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    "Well, I haven't seen Barbie yet, um"
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    "but I've seen people talking about
    the number of times they use"
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    "the word patriarchy in it"
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    "Feminism and the patriarchy
    and fighting it, and all that"
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    "And actually to call it the patriarchy in
    the film that phrase is used many times"
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    "If you take a shot every time
    Barbie says the word 'patriarchy',
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    you will pass out before the movie ends"
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    "As we learned that the use of word
    'patriarchy' no less than ten times in this film"
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    "The patriarchy is a big part of
    this Barbie film"
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    "The word is used endlessly in the movie
    even though most people"
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    "even me actually has no idea that
    what 'patriarchy' really means"
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    That is a truly staggering
    level of defensiveness
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    especially coming from people who
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    don't really seem to understand
    what the word even means
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    While there are many legitimate criticisms
    of the Barbie movie's feminism or lack thereof
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    this video essay is not going to
    address those questions
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    Instead, we're going to use the movie
    as a sort of primary
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    to help explain
    what patriarchy actually is
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    what it isn't and how it ends up
    harming everyone including men
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    "Watch your flank"
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    To have any kind of
    productive conversation
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    we have to get over that defensiveness
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    that so many mem feel whenever
    they come across the word patriarchy
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    "This is a real hornets nest in here"
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    Contrary to popular belief
    patriarchy is not a synonym for men
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    nor is it a code word for masculinity
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    and it certainly has nothing to do
    with hating men
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    "yeah I am confused about that"
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    General confusion about what
    patriarchy means
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    is perhaps not surprising
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    given that the word
    very rarely appears in popular media
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    When the term has been used
    it's traditionally been as a joke
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    to mock feminists or feminism
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    "let's take off our brows and burn them
    in defiance of the misogynistic patriarchy"
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    "you know what I think
    I have to meet Harvey, but um"
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    "maybe we can burn
    our underwear together later"
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    "when the last time we had a conversation
    over 3 minutes it was about"
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    "the patriarchal bias of
    the Mr. Roger's show"
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    "Well with King Friday lording it
    over all the Lesser puppets"
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    "What did I miss?"
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    "The oppressive patriarchal values
    that dictate our education"
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    "good"
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    It's only after the rise of
    the me too movement
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    that we begin to see
    a shift in this pattern
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    "Stay out of it Courtney"
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    "You stay out of it.
    I'm dismantling the patriarchy this year"
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    "and I'm not afraid to start with you"
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    These days the word is most often
    written for snarky teenage characters
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    "So you were Guided by Lon chivalry"
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    "a tool of the patriarchy to extract
    my undying gratitude?"
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    "mhm, you know
    most people just say thank you"
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    It's meant to identify them as brash,
    rebellious or naively idealistic
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    though not necessarily wrong
    in their observations
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    "I think marriage is just a patriarchal system
    designed to make women less autonomous"
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    "You become your husband's property,
    you have to bear his children"
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    "you even have to take his name"
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    "Hey, didn't you say that prom was a..."
    "A postcolonial patriarchal construct"
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    "It is"
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    "But we would go as a group
    as a form of protest"
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    "Hey hey, ho ho,
    patriarchy has got to go"
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    "Hey hey, ho ho,
    patriarchy has got to go"
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    Even in this new limited context
    the word is still delivered as a punch
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    "I'm jus... I mean is that it?"
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    and its meaning is left
    intentionally vague
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    "it's called Little Women
    and it's about four sisters"
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    "who overcome poverty
    and the patriarchy..."
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    "Nope, dolls"
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    The lack of specificity guarantees that
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    only those who are already in the know
    will get the joke
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    "Down with the patriarchy"
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    "Idiots ah"
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    Everyone else is left
    either bewildered or extremely threatened
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    "Why didn't Barbie tell me
    about patriarchy?"
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    "Which to my understanding is where men
    and horses run everything?"
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    "I'll silver away!"
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    Sorry, Ken, but there are no horses involved
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    Although, it does kind of make sense
    why he might think that
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    "That's not fair is it? You know
    is it the fault of the patriarchy?"
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    "Also, what is a patriarchy?"
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    In its modern usage
    patriarchy refers to a type of society
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    that's constructed to promote
    male power and authority
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    in sociological terms it's what's called
    a social system
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    rooted in four distinct principles
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    a society is patriarchal to the degree
    that it's male-dominated
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    male centered, male identified and
    organized around an obsession with control
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    We're going to go over
    what all of that means in detail
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    but the important thing to remember
    about social systems
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    is that we are not those systems
    and those systems are not us
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    "Because Barbie land, is now Kenland"
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    So in the Barbie movie The Kens have a (coup?)
    and Implement patriarchy
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    But the Kens as a group are
    not patriarchy itself
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    "Here I'm just a dude"
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    The Kens make patriarchy happen
    by doing it
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    When they stop participating the
    social system effectively ceases to exist
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    In the same way that we can describe
    a board game and its rules
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    without saying anything about
    the personality of the individual players
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    so, too, can we talk about
    the system of patriarchy and how it works
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    without condemning every individual man
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    Now keep in mind that the Barbie movie
    focuses mostly on Straight White characters
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    but patriarchy impacts people in
    different ways based on their sexuality
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    and race, class or geographical location
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    "Is there a problem offices?"
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    Moving forward in this video
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    I'm going to be heavily borrowing from a
    book called The Gender Knot
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    by sociologist Alan G Johnson
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    Since the devil is in the details,
    let's use Kenland
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    "Kendom"
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    "Kendom"
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    "Kendomland"
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    "Land of the..."
    "Land of the free of the men"
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    "Right. Well, this place"
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    Let's use Kendomland to help illustrate
    how patriarchy works
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    "I shall seek my fortune there"
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    "Alright"
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    The first characteristic of a patriarchal
    society is that it's male dominated
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    This is relatively straightforward
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    All it means is that positions of authority
    are generally reserved for men
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    Basically when you look up in
    the various hierarchies of society
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    you'll tend to see more and more men
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    The Barbie movie gives us a vivid illustration
    of what male dominance looks like
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    We are presented with a montage of images
    featuring powerful and important men
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    It's notable that up until recently
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    women have largely been
    excluded from these fields
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    "I'll take a high level,
    high paying job with influence, please"
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    "Okay you'll need at least an NBA"
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    Ken also learns an important lesson
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    when he demands to be given
    a powerful position
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    he has unceremoniously rejected
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    "No I won't let you do
    just one appendectomy"
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    "But I'm a man"
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    "But not a doctor"
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    "Please"
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    "No"
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    This is because male dominance does not
    mean that every individual man is powerful
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    "I'm a man with no power
    does that make me a woman?"
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    In fact most men living in patriarchy
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    will never acquire
    a formal position of power
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    "This is bad. This is really bad"
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    "What?"
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    Instead they'll spend their entire lives
    laboring under the boot of
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    other more powerful men
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    "Are any women in charge?"
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    Despite what this
    Mattel boardroom scene implies
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    It's not impossible for a woman to
    ascend to the top in patriarchy
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    It just means it'll be much much harder
    for women to gain and maintain power
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    and she will be tokenized and regarded as
    a special exception to the rule
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    "I love you guys"
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    Unlike in the fantasy world of Barbie land
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    there has never been
    a female president of the United States
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    "How come you're so amazing?"
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    "No comment. Ah ha ha ha"
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    But even when a woman eventually
    does win that position
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    it will not mean that patriarchy is over
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    Because patriarchy is a dynamic
    and resilient system
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    It has evolved and changed
    over the decades
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    and indeed centuries
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    Thanks to countless women who have fought
    hard for a few seats at the table
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    but the table is still male-dominated
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    "You guys are clearly
    not doing patriarchy very well"
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    "No. Ha ha. No, we're uh,
    we're doing it well, yeah"
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    "We're just uh, hide it better now"
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    The second aspect of a patriarchal society
    is that it's male centered
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    This simply means
    that the focus of attention
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    is primarily on men and boys
    and what they do
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    One of the reasons Barbie land
    is so visually startling
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    is because it's a rare vision of
    a female centered world
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    It's something we almost never
    see in Hollywood
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    outside of cheesy Sci-Fi movies
    from the 1950s
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    "Landing on an unknown planet"
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    "they are captured by long limb beauties"
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    "When they say take me to your leader
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    "and they take them to
    a creature like this"
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    "you know they're on planet Venus"
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    "Hi Barbie"
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    "Yeah, space"
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    In Barbie Land the focus of
    attention is naturally
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    placed on the Barbies and what they do
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    But after the coup, the Kens immediately
    push the Barbies aside
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    and put themselves and masculinity
    at the center of absolutely everything
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    "Everything basically everything"
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    "Exists to expand and elevate
    the presence of men"
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    This is an exaggerated reflection of
    our own male centered world
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    All you have to do is turn on the news
    or go to the movies
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    and you'll be inundated
    with endless stories centering men
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    "A symbol to the nation"
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    "a hero to the world"
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    "The Beacon of Hope, shining up"
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    Obviously, this doesn't mean that
    women are never centered under patriarchy
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    But when they are
    it's often framed as a woman's story
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    rather than a human story
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    The Barbie movie for example
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    is very specifically a story about the
    gendered experience
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    of being a woman in society
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    "Anxiety, panic attacks
    and OCD sold separately"
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    We can contrast that
    with a movie like Oppenheimer
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    which is a story about becoming death
    the destroyer of worlds
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    Yes this destroyer of worlds
    happens to be a man
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    But notice the story isn't focused on the
    gendered experience
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    of being a man in society
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    In fact, all of Christopher Nolan's film
    center very important men
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    but none are about their gender
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    They are built as stories representative
    of the human experience writ large
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    Greta Gerwig's movies on the other hand
    all center women
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    and are very explicitly about being a
    woman trying to navigate a man's world
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    "Very well"
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    [Inaudible]
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    That's not a criticism of
    either director by the way
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    It's just a stark illustration of what
    male centered means
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    In patriarchy men are viewed as
    the default for human
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    and therefore, male experiences are framed
    as an exploration of the human condition
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    While women's experiences are
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    first and foremost, framed as
    being about womanhood
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    "Okay"
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    Incidentally this deep-seated
    cultural expectation of male centrality
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    helps explain the waves of
    backlash against any entertainment
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    that's made for a general audience
    but doesn't center men or masculinity
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    Male identification
    is a little more complicated
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    But it is a critical piece
    of the patriarchal puzzle
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    It means that core cultural ideas
    about what is considered good,
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    desirable, preferable or normal
    are culturally associated
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    with how we think about men,
    manhood and masculinity
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    this is why professions that elevate
    qualities like toughness, competitiveness
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    strength, control, rationality
    and invulnerability are so highly valued
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    and highly paid in our society
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    "Monsters"
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    While occupations that revolve
    around qualities
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    thought of as feminine like
    compassion, sharing or caregiving
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    tend to be systematically
    devalued and underfunded
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    "You know Greg's in medicine too, Larry"
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    "Oh really what field?"
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    "Uh, nursing"
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    [Laughter]
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    In the Barbie movie, The Kens establish
    an aggressively male identified society
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    They do this by stripping
    Barbie land of its feminine identity
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    and superimposing a version of hyper
    masculinity that seems to have been
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    lifted from 1980s action movies
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    They replace all the pink furniture with
    black leather recliners
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    drape everything in obnoxious
    cowboy motifs
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    and litter the landscape with gym
    equipment and sporting gear
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    "Don't question it
    just roll with, tiny baby"
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    "He call me baby?"
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    But male identification goes
    much deeper than aesthetics
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    When Ken decides to embrace patriarchy
    his behavior shifts accordingly
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    as he tries to project
    male identified values
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    "You can stay if you want,
    as my bride wife"
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    "or my long-term low commitment
    distanced girlfriend"
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    He buries self-doubt and hides
    his hurt feelings
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    behind a layer of false bravado
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    "Bruski beer me?"
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    "I will not Bruski beer you"
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    "Ha ha ha, that's fine"
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    Under patriarchy the concept of leadership
    and indeed power itself
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    is closely identified with masculinity
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    It follows then that all men are
    socially elevated by default
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    while women and feminine things
    are devalued and seen as inferior
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    "Oh you got fries with that shit?"
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    "If I said you had a hot body
    would you hold it?"
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    This means that even men
    who don't hold any institutional power
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    can still see themselves
    as superior to women
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    That point is underscored
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    when we see that the Kens
    are generally inept at running Society
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    "Go face day drunk right now"
    [Laughter]
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    "(?)"
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    They spend their time day drinking,
    playing games, and goofing off
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    "Every night is boy's night"
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    And yet they still see themselves
    as superior
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    simply by virtue of being men
    living in a patriarchy
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    "You're like I can't believe how great
    this place is"
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    In Kendom land all the Barbies
    are reduced to servants
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    "Where are my hungry boys who want snacks"
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    But in the real world a small number of
    women can gain power
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    even inside of male identified systems
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    However in order to do so they
    must prove themselves worthy
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    by appearing to be just as aggressive
    competitive and even less emotional
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    than any man in that same position
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    In other words, even though they are women
    they must adopt and perform
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    male identified patriarchal values
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    The fourth and final feature of patriarchy
    is an obsession with control
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    as a core value around which social and
    personal life are organized
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    Men maintain their privilege by
    controlling both women and other men
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    who might threaten it
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    The Barbie movie downplays it
    but men's violence against women
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    and the everpresent threat thereof
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    "Give us a smile, blondie"
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    is a critical element in maintaining
    patriarchal control
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    "I'm not getting any of that. I feel
    that can only be described as admired"
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    "but not (?) and there's no
    undertone of violence"
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    "Mine very much has an
    undertone of violence"
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    Control can also be achieved in other ways
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    and since the Kens don't really
    understand violence
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    they use coercion and manipulation
    to control daily life in Barbie land
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    "What is wrong with them?"
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    "We just explain to them the immaculate
    impeccable seamless gaunlet of logic"
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    "that is patriarchy and they crumbled"
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    Not the Kens take over
    every institution
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    they also take control of the Dream Houses
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    "This shall henceforth be known as
    Ken's Mojo Dojo Kasa house"
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    and they manipulate the Barbies into
    embracing their new status
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    as objectified servants
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    "Anyone need a Bruski beer?"
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    "What are you doing? You're a doctor"
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    I like being a helpful decoration
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    The illusion of intellectual
    and rational superiority
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    is critical to enforcing the myth
    that men are in control of every situation
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    "Let me show you"
    "Here, let me show you"
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    "Here, let us show you"
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    and therefore deserve their
    privilege status
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    "Now you listen to me"
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    This is emblematic of how men
    in the real world
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    will often compensate for feelings of
    personal inadequacy
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    by exercising extreme control
    over those closest to them
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    "You are going to be home at 6 o'clock
    every night"
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    "and you are going to have dinner
    ready on this table"
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    Especially women and children
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    "No"
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    "I don't want to push you around"
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    Returning to The Gender Knot:
    "Men are assumed and expected
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    to be in control at all times
    to be unemotional except for anger and rage
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    to present themselves as invulnerable,
    autonomous, independent
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    logical, dispassionate,
    knowledgeable, always right
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    and in command of every situation
    especially those involving women"
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    [Laughter]
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    "Who are you texting?"
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    "Huh?"
    "Who are you texting?"
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    "No one"
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    "Hmm, let me just"
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    [giggle]
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    "Ken!"
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    This obsession with control is
    so strong in our culture
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    that any man who is perceived
    as not exerting enough control over women
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    is likely to be ridiculed as
    pussy whipped, packed
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    or tethered to the old balling chain
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    Notice that there are no equivalent
    derogatory terms for men
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    Who do control women
    only for men who don't
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    The obsession with control manifests
    in countless ways, big and small
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    "We would love it, if you could just
    get into that giant box"
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    But, control over women, their bodies
    and their sexuality
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    is a core tenant under patriarchy
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    "Get in the box! You Jezebel"
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    Recall that the Kens take control
    of the government
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    and use its power to actively exclude
    the Barbies from civic life
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    "That's right. In just 48 hours
    all the Kens will head to the polls"
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    "and vote to change the Constitution to
    a government for the Kens of the Kens,"
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    "and by the Kens!"
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    Since these are children's toys
    the Barbies can't reproduce
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    Well, aside from Midge that one time
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    But, the rest of the Barbies
    can't have babies
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    but if they could the Kens
    would have no doubt
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    curtailed their reproductive rights
    just like in the real world
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    The social system I've just described
    is very obviously oppressive to women
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    But while patriarchy definitely
    benefits men
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    it's paradoxically a poison chalice
    because it robs men of their full humanity
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    "Okay, here's the deal.
    It's not just about how they see us"
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    "it's about how they see themselves"
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    We only have time to scratch the surface
    on this topic
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    But embedded in Ken's story,
    we can find a few hints
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    as to how patriarchy ends up harming men
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    Even though Hollywood loves to play on
    themes of a war between the genders
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    that framing misses a critical point
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    because patriarchy is not
    a competition between men and women
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    Rather, it's an endless competition
    for dominance
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    wherein men are pitted against each other
    for a place in what RW Connell calls:
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    "the hierarchy of masculinities"
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    The white heterosexual hyper
    masculine ideal
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    is at the top of the hierarchy
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    All other forms of manhood especially
    those in any way associated with
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    homosexuality or femininity
    are pushed further down on the hierarchy
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    "When you're slapped, you'll
    take it and like it"
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    Recall that when the Kens go to war
    it isn't against the Barbies
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    it's against the other Kens
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    "We go to war"
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    "Against the Barbies?"
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    "No, against the Kens"
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    "But we are the Kens"
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    "The other Kens"
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    Up until this point, I've been mining
    the Barbies movie to help illustrate
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    how patriarchy works
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    But the usefulness of the film's
    narrative is limited
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    especially when it comes to
    male competition
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    "Looks this beach is a little
    too much beach for you, Ken"
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    "If I wasn't severely injured,
    I would beach you off right now, Ken"
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    " I'll beach you up with you any day, Ken"
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    You may remember for example
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    that long before they ever discover
    what patriarchy even is
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    Ken and Ken are engaged
    in a bitter competition
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    over control of Barbie's
    time and attention
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    "Bet you can't do a flip like that, Ken"
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    This is where the Barbies script
    is perhaps
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    a little too clever for its own good
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    Because it's many overlapping
    metaphors and allegories
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    leave us with some mixed messages
    about the Kens
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    the rivalry between the Kens
    may work as a sort of gender flipped
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    commentary on how women are taught
    to seek validation through male attention
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    "I only exist within
    the warmth of your gaze"
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    It is less successful however, as part of
    the film's larger critique of patriarchy
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    Because the Ken's competitive rivalry
    carries with it some uncomfortable
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    echoes of male entitle
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    "I bet you're scared and
    I bet she doesn't even wanted to go"
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    And that behavior is not attributed to
    patriarchy in the first half of the movie
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    which is confusing because it
    definitely should be
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    "Hi, Barbie"
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    [grunt]
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    "Hi, Ken"
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    "Hi, Ken"
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    The thing about being obsessed
    with control
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    is that it traps men in a cycle of fear
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    "Hi, Barbie"
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    "Hi, Ken"
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    The more men value control,
    the more they're afraid of losing it
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    This leaves men riddled with anxiety
    about not measuring up to other men
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    which means they can never truly feel
    secure in their own masculinity
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    "I made a double bet with Ken and you can't
    make me look uncool in front of Ken"
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    "Ken's not cool"
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    "He is to me"
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    In the movie the patriarchal battle
    for dominance
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    culminates in an absurdest dream ballet
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    but in reality the consequences
    can be deadly serious
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    Most violence in the real world
    is perpetrated by men against other men
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    This Grim reality is part of why the
    Barbie's plan to overthrow patriarchy
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    by tricking the Kens into fighting
    each other is so wildly misguided
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    "You play on their egos and their
    petty jealousies"
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    "and you turn them against each other"
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    While the scene is undoubtedly funny
    and the song choice, absolutely perfect
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    aggressive competitive male behavior is
    a core feature of patriarchy
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    Not a bug that can be exploited
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    "And now they destroy themselves"
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    And for the record, men's violence
    is definitely not something
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    that women manipulate men into doing
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    Something else the movie doesn't show
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    is how the enormous pressures patriarchy
    places on men can lead to self harm
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    either directly or indirectly through
    addiction and other risky behaviors
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    The prohibition on expressing vulnerability
    compounds the problem
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    by making it difficult, if not impossible,
    for men to ask for help
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    or build emotional support networks
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    "Ken?"
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    "Oh hey, Barbie"
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    "Hi"
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    "How much of that did you see?"
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    Of course all people need love,
    intimacy and nurture
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    But since patriarchy devalues caregiving
    and labels it as feminine
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    many men feel compelled to sacrifice
    their emotional sides
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    in order to preserve
    their identity as real men
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    As a result, many guys, especially
    straight guys
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    falsely believe that women are
    somehow responsible
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    "Oh, but I don't want you here"
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    "Is it Ken?"
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    "Ken's just a really good friend"
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    "Goodnight"
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    That being rejected is tantamount to
    women holding emotional intimacy hostage
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    when in reality it's not women
    but patriarchy
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    that's blocking men's access to
    emotional and physical intimacy
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    So when Barbie refuses Ken's advances
    he becomes resentful
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    he lashes out
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    "No you failed me"
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    And he ends up harming everyone,
    including himself
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    [Cry]
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    "Don't look at me"
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    In her excellent book: The Will to
    Change
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    Bell Hooks doesn't mince words when
    describing what happens to men
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    inside of patriarchy
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    "Teaching boys to despise their
    vulnerability is one way to socialize them"
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    "to engage in self-inflicted soul murder"
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    It's no wonder then that Ken isn't really
    happy living in patriarchy
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    In fact, in Kendom land he was even further
    alienated from Barbie
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    From his own feelings and
    from the other Kens
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    Part of this interview with Julia Fox
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    where she's hooked up to
    a polygraph machine
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    became a viral meme on Tik Tok
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    "I hate the patriarchy there's
    a lot of really good men"
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    "Answer the question"
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    "Do I hate men? No"
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    "That's a lie"
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    The viral audio snippet stopped there
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    But when we play the rest of it her answer
    is Illuminating and nuanced
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    "There's a lot of men that benefit from
    the systemic oppression of women"
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    "in our culture and society
    and religions and I do wish that"
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    "more men could stand up for us"
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    She explains that she obviously does
    not hate all individual men
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    What she hates is the fact that most men
    do absolutely nothing
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    to help end the oppression of women
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    So what can men do to make a difference
    in ending this system?
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    "The Kens.
    They found us"
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    Let's use Allan as our proxy for this
    part of the discussion
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    since he's the only guy who joins
    the Barbies' revolution
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    Well, aside from these two brief cameos
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    "Sugar daddy?"
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    "No no no no, I'm not a sugar daddy.
    This is sugar and I'm her daddy"
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    "And I have an earring, a magic earring"
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    Notice that all three of these
    characters are queer coded
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    and despite being men,
    they're marginalized
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    in the hierarchy of masculinities
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    Allan in particular, embodies a bunch of
    common mistakes
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    that men make when trying to disentangle
    themselves from the system of patriarchy
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    The first thing Allan does is nothing
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    He is a bystander who is nonetheless
    still afforded
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    a measure of privilege in Kendom Land
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    that the Barbies are not
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    "And Alan likes to help me give
    all the Kens foot massages"
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    "No, I don't, I don't like that"
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    "We love it"
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    Like some men in the real world,
    Alan might not be actively or consciously
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    participating in the oppression of women
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    but he doesn't speak out against it either
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    The next thing Allan does is
    try to escape
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    As soon as he spies a way out for himself,
    he tries to take it
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    "How are you?"
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    "I'm Allan.
    Don't tell the Ken I'm trying to escape"
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    "I cannot sit on one more leather couch
    it's going to break my spirit"
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    The problem is man can't just
    opt out of patriarchy
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    because it's been woven into the very
    fabric of our whole society
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    "What, what do we do?"
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    "Just get in the car and keep it singing"
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    The next thing Allan tries is to engage
    in displays of chivalrous violence
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    After learning the extent of the
    injustice women face
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    some men try to distance themselves
    from the problem
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    and from any personal culpability
    by going after particularly, bad men
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    But patriarchy isn't a person
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    and you can't punch a a social system
    in the face
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    as much as you might want to
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    "Guess what happened?"
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    "I, I got into a fight I'm fine but I..."
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    "I think we solved feminism"
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    "Yeah! once and for all"
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    "It was just like a a total melee,
    like on the news"
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    And most of the time men lashing
    out in violence isn't helpful
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    as it simply replicates
    the core values of patriarchy
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    Allan fumbles around for a while, but
    eventually he joins the Barbies' revolution
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    and figures out how to stand with
    them in solidarity
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    Notably though, Allan never tries to
    confront the Kens
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    about what they're doing
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    And that's unfortunate because
    the most important thing men can do
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    is challenge other men
    on their behavior
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    and encourage them to rebel
    against patriarchal expectations
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    Despite all the harm it does to women
    and to men's well-being
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    the system of patriarchy remains
    invisible to most people
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    And the Barbie movie for all its flaws,
    makes it visible
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    This is, I'd argue, at the root of why
    so many right-wing pundits
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    were so extremely threatened
    by this cartoony fantasy land
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    Not only does the film acknowledge
    the existence of patriarchy
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    it dares to suggest that it's not a
    natural or inevitable institution
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    And in doing so it lays bare the
    fundamental truth about all social systems
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    they can be dismantled
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    "No Barbie or Ken should be
    living in the shadows"
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    "Or Allan"
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    Choosing to confront such an
    entrenched system
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    can be risky for men and
    extremely dangerous for women
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    Nonetheless, all over the world women
    are challenging patriarchy
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    like never before in modern history
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    And the reality is that every day
    more and more men
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    are choosing to stand with those women
    to join the struggle for liberation
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    and to reclaim their full humanity
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    "Thank you"
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    Thanks for watching
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    video essays
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Title:
Patriarchy According to The Barbie Movie
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
33:01

English subtitles

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