Earlier during the week we analyzed a piece titled "Our Barbies, Ourselves". This piece discussed how Barbie has made women have impossible standards for their physical characteristics. One part that I found particularly compelling was when Prager introduces the fact that Barbie has "humongous breasts," but her male counterpart, Ken, only possesses a "truncated, unidentifiable lump". She states that Barbie, with her big breasts and perfect physique, urges females nowadays to feel the need to show off their bodies for men, who are protected from the need to divulge their "lumps". Prager believes that this stigma has lasted even in today's world- a world with "movies and videos... filled with topless women and covered men."
Prager claims that women feel the need to expose their bodies to please men. She suggests that men have expectations that their girlfriends and wives feel pressure to fulfill. However, in many instances in today's society, the opposite of Prager's claim is true; men nowadays are put in a position where they must please the expectations of women.
Take for example a Twitter post depicted below. As I was dragging through my Twitter feed, I stumbled across a post that brought up a very good point. In the tweet, Nick Jonas and Miley Cyrus are compared, introducing a double standard that proves that men are victims of sexual exploitation.
This image, which shows the headlines of two different articles, illustrates the crude differences in how the bodies of women and men are demanded by society. Miley Cyrus is criticized for showing off her body, but Nick Jonas is praised and even receives a "You've Gotta See This New Pic!" This article headline is relatable to the constant buzz for One Direction or Five Seconds of Summer or of course, everyone's favorite wildcat. Twitter profiles like "Total Man Candy" constantly post pictures of half-naked men.
It seems that in "Barbie's world," Miley is simply doing what every woman in today's society strives to do; but she gets criticized constantly and gets ridiculed when she does put clothes on. In Prager's piece, women are forced to expose themselves to appease the standards of men. But if you ask me, these two articles show that the opposite is true. Contrary to Prager's claim, it is evident that men have become objects of the impossible expectations for the boy-band fan girls and the "Man Candy Monday" followers.