Barbieland : the unauthorized history
(2025)

Nonfiction

Book

Call Numbers:
NEW POP CULTURE

Availability

Locations Call Number Status
New & Popular Pop Culture NEW POP CULTURE Available

Details

PUBLISHED
New York, NY : One Signal Publishers/Atria, 2025
©2025
EDITION
First One Signal Publishers/Atria Books hardcover edition
DESCRIPTION

vi, 343 pages ; 24 cm

ISBN/ISSN
9781668031827, 1668031825 :, 1668031825, 9781668031827
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The gambler -- The king -- Lilli -- The receipts -- Mr. Mass Motivation -- Christmas in July -- Barbie v. Barbie -- The playboy -- The babysitter -- Francie -- Operation Bootstrap -- The suits -- The leaks -- The strike -- Hostile takeovers -- The collectors -- The Buddenbrooks cycle -- President Barbie -- Sex, death, and lawsuits -- Master of your domain -- House on fire -- Two big kahunas -- The Bratz brief -- The midnight ride -- The last resort

The secret history of Barbie and what Mattel has done to keep her on top. For nearly seven decades, Mattel billed Barbie as the first adult doll -- a revolutionary alternative to the baby dolls before her, which had treated little girls as future mothers rather than future women. But Barbie was no original. She was a knockoff: a nearly identical copy of a German doll now erased from the narrative in favour of Mattel's preferred version of history. It was Barbie's first secret but far from her last. In Barbieland, journalist and The Drift editor Tarpley Hitt exposes the long-hidden backstory of the world's most famous doll. After snuffing out her predecessor, Barbie climbed to the throne of global girlhood and stayed there, fending off rivals with a mix of strategic marketing, government influence, ruthless litigation, and covert tactics worthy of a classic spy novel. This lively, authoritative ride through the underbelly of American business pulls back the curtain on the corporate titans, cultural influencers, and toyland rivals who shaped this icon's world -- from flawed founder Ruth Handler to convicted Wall Street fraudster (and improbable Barbie saviour) Michael Milken to the Bratz doll empire, which once put the brand on life support. Along the way, Hitt delves into the stories of the eccentrics and autocrats who brought Barbie to life through sheer force of will: a pair of ex-Nazi toymakers, a toy mogul friend of J. Edgar Hoover's, a swinging missile designer turned Barbie executive married to Zsa Zsa Gabor, and Mattel's mid-century Freudian marketeer, who saw the doll as a psychosexual skeleton key to controlling the American mind. Through investigative reporting, global archival research, and interviews with key players from across the Barbie extended universe, Barbieland lays bare the unseen -- and so often absurd -- work that made Mattel a multibillion-dollar business and turned Barbie into an institution: a symbol as synonymous with American soft power as Coca-Cola and McDonald's french fries

Additional Titles

TITLES