Skip to Main Content (Press Enter)

Let’s Call Her Barbie Reader’s Guide

By Renée Rosen

Let's Call Her Barbie by Renée Rosen

Let’s Call Her Barbie Reader’s Guide

By Renée Rosen

Category: Historical Fiction | Women’s Fiction | Literary Fiction

READERS GUIDE

Reader’s Guide
Let’s Call Her Barbie by Renée Rosen
Discussion Questions:


1.   Despite Ruth’s intention to create a doll that would empower young girls, from the very beginning Barbie has been both celebrated and vilified. Do you think of Barbie as a feminist icon or a dangerous role model for women?

2.   Throughout this novel, you get a behind-the-scenes look at the development and creation of Barbie. For example, you learned the real reasons why her waist is so tiny, her feet are so small, her neck is so long, etc. Barbie’s creators never lost sight of the fact that she was just a plastic figurine with anatomically impossible body measurements. And yet some people thought they were supposed to look like her. What is it about Barbie that you think separates her from other dolls and toys and has this effect on people, both positive and negative?

3.   Ruth was certainly a nontraditional woman for her time. She tried to have it all—a husband, children and a career. What are your thoughts
about her as a mother and her relationship with Barbara? How do you think her own childhood impacted her views on motherhood?

4.   Jack Ryan was the unlikely Romeo of Mattel. What do you think it was about Jack that the women found so appealing and irresistible? What did you think about his relationship with Stevie? What did you think about Ruth and Seymour Rosenberg’s attempts to shortchange him on his royalties and phase him out of Mattel?

5.   Growing Up Skipper came under fire—rightfully so—from the National Organization for Women as soon as she was released. Can you cite other Barbie controversies through the years? What do you think about the Barbie line today, which is based on diversity and inclusion, with a multitude of skin tones, hairstyles, body images and other more representative features?

6.   Barbie has had more than 200 careers, from fashion model to astronaut. What do you think were the most important milestones for Barbie, and how was she ahead of her time?

7.   How did you feel when you learned that Barbie was inspired by Bild Lilli, a German prostitute gag doll? Did that surprise you?

8.   Ruth and Jack were both instrumental in the creation of Barbie. Ironically, they each had a Barbara in their lives and took credit for the
name and the doll itself. After Jack’s tragic death, Ruth did a little revisionist history and downplayed if not erased his contributions to the doll’s success. Did you think Jack had a right to claim he created Barbie?

9.   Ruth developed breast cancer in 1970, which led to the creation of her next enterprise, Nearly Me. She saw her prosthetic breasts as a way to help millions of breast cancer survivors. What did you think about her coming full circle in terms of her relationship with creating breasts for a doll for little girls and then creating breasts for grown women?

10. Ironically, many Barbie collectors say it’s because they weren’t allowed to have a Barbie when they were growing up that they became involved in collecting. Did you play with Barbies as a child, or did you shave off all her hair in a fit of protest? Were you allowed to have Barbies, or did your parents forbid you to play with “that” doll?
 
Back to Top