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Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The Year of the Doll

Critics at Large | The New Yorker

The New Yorker

Society & Culture

4.4678 Ratings

🗓️ 21 December 2023

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In the highest-grossing movie of 2023, Barbie, a literal doll, leaves the comforts of Barbieland and ventures into real-world Los Angeles, where she discovers the myriad difficulties of modern womanhood. This arc from cosseted naïveté to feminist awakening is a narrative throughline that connects some of the biggest cultural products of the year. In this episode of Critics at Large, the staff writers Vinson Cunningham, Naomi Fry, and Alexandra Schwartz discuss how 2023 became “the year of the doll,” tracing the trope from “Barbie” to Yorgos Lanthimos’s film “Poor Things,” whose protagonist finds self-determination through sexual agency, and beyond. In Sofia Coppola’s “Priscilla,” a teen-age Priscilla Beaulieu lives under the thumb of Elvis at Graceland before finally breaking free, while in Emma Cline’s novel “The Guest,” the doll figure must fend for herself after the trappings of luxury fall away, revealing the precarity of her circumstances. The hosts explore how ideas about whiteness, beauty, and women’s bodily autonomy inform these works, and how the shock of political backsliding might explain why these stories struck a chord with audiences. “Most of us believed that the work of Roe v. Wade was done,” Cunningham says. “If that is a message that we could all grasp—that a step forward is not a permanent thing—I think that would be a positive thing.”


Read, watch, and listen with the critics:


“Barbie” (2023)
“M3GAN” (2023)
“Poor Things” (2023)
“Priscilla” (2023)
The Guest,” by Emma Cline
The House of Mirth,” by Edith Wharton


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Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to Critics at Large, a podcast from The New Yorker.

0:07.4

I'm Vincent Cunningham.

0:08.4

I'm Alex Schwartz.

0:09.5

And I'm Nomi Fry.

0:10.9

Each week on this show, we make sense of what's happening in the culture right now and how we got here.

0:29.7

So, you guys, there comes a time in every critic's life, a very special time when that critic is obliged to consider what this year has been about.

0:35.8

And my friends, that time is now for us, the critics at large.

0:41.5

Yes.

0:41.9

Let us join hands and decide what the year has been about.

0:45.6

Let us pray.

0:48.3

Alex, would you like to do the honors?

0:52.2

Oh, I would indeed.

0:55.4

Well, as we three were sitting around discussing...

0:58.5

Shooting the shit.

0:59.4

Shooting the shit as we do on a regular basis, both on and off the air.

1:03.2

Crossing it back and forth.

1:04.1

Yeah, yeah.

1:04.9

And trying to come up with, you know, as Zanomi says, this great critic's responsibility to take a chaotic mess of a year as every year inevitably is and come up with one dominant, cultural through line, one narrative that will make sense of everything we've just experienced over these past 12 months.

1:22.2

We came up with the year of the doll.

1:26.1

That's right.

1:26.8

The year of the doll. We have seen any number of the Doll. That's right. The Year of the Doll.

1:28.1

We have seen any number of cultural objects in which a cloistered woman often used as a plaything by another person breaks free of her circumstances and goes off into the wide world to learn something about it and about herself.

...

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