Current:Home > InvestGreta Gerwig deserves more than an Oscar for portrayal of motherhood in 'Barbie' -MoneySpot
Greta Gerwig deserves more than an Oscar for portrayal of motherhood in 'Barbie'
View
Date:2025-04-11 20:00:41
Greta Gerwig, who directed “Barbie,” deserves more from the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences than exclusion from its list of best director nominees.
While Oscar voters didn't consider Gerwig's work good enough for a nomination, her delicate rendering of the female experience is more than enough for appreciative fans.
One idea in particular that Gerwig gently weaves into the movie is the notion that women are made for more than professional success − namely, motherhood − but achieving that level of self-actualization in the modern American workplace and society at large isn’t without obstacles.
Greta Gerwig treated pregnant Midge with respect
Gerwig brilliantly captures this part of the female struggle when Will Ferrell’s character, the CEO of doll manufacturer Mattel, travels to Barbieland and cringes when crossing paths with Midge, a pregnant Barbie so controversial in real life that she was temporarily pulled from store shelves.
Barbieland, implies Gerwig, isn’t all rainbows and butterflies.
Instead, Barbieland falls short of the ideal for those women who want to lean into their biology – for the women who want it all instead of forgoing children and #girlbossing their way from cubicle to corner office.
Sadly, the same is true of the real world. Take, for example, the recent Kyte Baby fiasco, in which the CEO of a baby-products company denied a mother's request to work from home to care for her newly adopted premature baby, who was fighting for his life in a neonatal intensive care unit.
The lesson from all of this?
Our society has a long way to go in accepting women for their intelligence and their biology. Instead of discouraging pregnancy through an overemphasis on reproductive rights and rigid work rules, lawmakers should protect would-be moms.
Vice President Kamala Harris’ recent comment citing parents' concern that college-age women lack abortion rights, however, impedes progress on this front. Our leaders should instead champion policies that empower women to balance work and motherhood.
Instead of reflexively pointing pregnant women to abortion facilities, for example, lawmakers should address the hurdles that discourage pregnancy and otherwise make it difficult for women to carry their babies to term. That can be achieved in a number of ways.
Abortion is 2024 election issue.And the Biden campaign won't let you forget it.
A good place to start is abortion advocates’ own research. The Guttmacher Institute reports that three of the most common reasons women seek abortion are fear that they can’t afford a baby, fear a baby would interfere with school or work, and fear of raising a baby alone.
Policy changes can help mothers in the workplace
To allay these fears, lawmakers could roll out private-public partnerships to expand maternity-leave programs, increase the availability of flexible spending accounts to pay for child care and, through tax incentives, encourage work-from-home arrangements, which now are shrinking post-pandemic.
Ultimately, in a world where women are having fewer kids than they desire and having those kids later in life, it’s critical that lawmakers take these recommendations to heart. Only then can women build their own version of Barbieland before age and disease eclipse their hope for the future.
Is Taylor Swift generous?Eras Tour billionaire should shake off criticism on donations.
What’s more, for all the "self-actualization" talk and "be what you want to be" mumbo jumbo, perhaps the most disenfranchising title a woman can earn in 21st century America is "Mom."
That needs to change, and Gerwig deserves more than an Oscar for advancing that conversation.
Carolyn Bolton is communications and marketing director for DonorsTrust, a mission-focused giving-account provider. She lives in Alexandria, Virginia.
veryGood! (81862)
Related
- Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
- NFL analyst Cris Collinsworth to sign contract extension with NBC Sports, per report
- Carrie Coon insists she's not famous. 'His Three Daughters' might change that.
- Dan Evans, former Republican governor of Washington and US senator, dies at 98
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- 'Golden Bachelorette': Gil Ramirez's temporary restraining order revelation prompts show removal
- A funeral mass is held for a teen boy killed in a Georgia high school shooting
- Spotted: The Original Cast of Gossip Girl Then vs. Now
- Who are the most valuable sports franchises? Forbes releases new list of top 50 teams
- The Daily Money: How the Fed cut affects consumers
Ranking
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- An appeals court has revived a challenge to President Biden’s Medicare drug price reduction program
- New York magazine says its star political reporter is on leave after a relationship was disclosed
- Court rules nearly 98,000 Arizonans whose citizenship hadn’t been confirmed can vote the full ballot
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- ‘She should be alive today’ — Harris spotlights woman’s death to blast abortion bans and Trump
- NFL analyst Cris Collinsworth to sign contract extension with NBC Sports, per report
- The latest: Kentucky sheriff faces murder charge over courthouse killing of judge
Recommendation
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Many players who made their MLB debuts in 2020 felt like they were ‘missing out’
Alleged Hezbollah financier pleads guilty to conspiracy charge
David Beckham shares what Lionel Messi wanted the most from his move to MLS
The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
Police arrest 15-year old for making social media threats against DC schools
USMNT star Christian Pulisic has been stellar, but needs way more help at AC Milan
'21st night of September' memes are back: What it means and why you'll see it