Documents found
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1042.
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1044.More information
Through the study of the image of Barbie, the author thinks about the "feminine condition" through the writings of Giorgio Agamben and particularly his notions of singularity and community. She shows how, in a totalitarian fashion, the famous doll contributes to reproduce the idea of an anonymous objectified woman. She then turns away from this figure of alienation to reflect on the community of "girls without names" that comes to life in Josée Yvon s poetry. These female terrorists, wild and embodied, violently blow up the male fantasy of the doll.
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1046.
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1050.