Philadelphia

The fallout of Britney’s sexuality

Britney’s “Baby One More Time” video sealed her sexuality.

Britney Spears’ new album, “Femme Fatale,” debuts this week. Looking back, author Peggy Orenstein examines the long-lasting — and damaging — effects of the “Girl Power” pop star’s sexuality.

In your new book, “Cinderella Ate My Daughter,” you write about how Disney princess culture has altered your little girl’s view of sexuality. It reminded me of Britney Spears, when she debuted in a schoolgirl outfit posing suggestively.

Yes, she set a template for a lot of the confusion that came after and was ironically a direct outgrowth of the Girl Power movement — she had an impact on the way Girl Power was commodified and changed. On the one hand, she was a breakthrough because she was a girl who was a star for girls, as opposed to, say, David Cassidy or Bobby Sherman or the Jonas Brothers today. But as such, she had this whole different approach. She was at once selling chastity and sex and combining them in this really weird way.

And she was doing this for really little girls when she started.

It’s hard to remember now, but one of her central fan bases was 6-year-old girls, who would go to her concerts and scream and shout. She always talked about being a virgin. And she’d say, if you see me as a Lolita, that’s your problem. But everything she did completely contradicted that. It’s this weird thing where she was sexualizing innocence and fetishizing it. So it was an ultimately incredibly disempowering stance for girls to see.

And what’s been the fallout all these years later?

The culture has taken up that message. It plays into the diva culture of little girls right now, that accelerated makeup and hot dance moves, with Miley Cyrus and the like. I want to be clear: I don’t come at this from a perspective to be negative about sexuality. It’s just that when little girls have inappropriate sexuality — however it’s imposed, by pop culture or adults they love — they don’t understand it. The risk is that they never connect it and sexiness becomes a performance for them rather than something that involves intimacy. Instead they see sexiness as something they do for the pleasure and entertainment for others. As if self-objectification was a rite of passage.

You see that today: Young girls “sext” naked photos of themselves to boyfriends.

With sexting, there’s also an issue of sexual entitlement. Girls are feeling like they have to perform the idea that they’re comfortable with their sexuality. And you have to wonder, what is it that they’re getting? They don’t have pleasure or control. What is the reality of what that act gives them? It’s not anything healthy.

So what are parents supposed to do?

First, it’s about limiting their access to media and such, when they’re really little. And also trying to expand their ideas of who they are and what they can be, that’s not linked constantly to playing at pretty or sassy (which is sexy with training wheels). Educate them and yourself.


News
Entertainment
Sports
Lifestyle
National

UPDATE: Internet star 'Kai the Hitchhiker' caught in…

UPDATE 8 p.m.: Union County N.J. officials announced Thursday evening that Philadelphia Police apprehended Caleb Lawrence McGillvary, AKA Kai the Hatchet Wielding Hitchhiker, at the…

Music

One Direction reveals 'edgy' new album and 2014…

No album release date has been set yet, but the tour will begin in 2014

International

Saudi Arabia religious police takes issue with Twitter

While many people in Saudi Arabia may be using Twitter, it doesn't mean some Saudi officials are happy with that.

Local

Join Mayor Nutter for bike to work day

Mayor Michael Nutter will lead a group of bicyclists from Boat House Row, through the Benjamin Franklin Parkway to Love Park for National Bike to Work Day.

Entertainment

Comedian Meyers to stay at NBC's 'SNL' ahead…

Seth Meyers to stay at Saturday Night Live until the end of the year he said on Thursday

Entertainment

Comics convention representing black superheroes opens this weekend

There aren't too many black superheroes, judging by the stars of summer blockbusters and the faces seen in mainstream comics. The mission of the annual…

Entertainment

Singer Bob Dylan made honorary member of U.S.…

Singer Bob Dylan was made an honorary member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

Television

Summer TV Guide: What you'll be watching

What the networks have in store

Auto racing

Report: Dick Trickle, former NASCAR driver, dead of…

Report: Dick Trickle, former NASCAR driver, dead of apparent suicide

MLB

Halladay undergoes surgery, recovery process begins

Roy Halladay had successful shoulder surgery.

NBA

Report: Sixers to interview Rockets' Sampson

Kelvin Sampson to interview with Sixers.

Sports

Union Notebook: Club falls to Galaxy, Fire up…

Union set to host Fire Saturday night.

Career

Volunteer to start your career

Working as a volunteer can make your LinkedIn profile more desirable to employers.

Food

Super smoothies by Julie Morris

Julie Morris, talk smoothies and shares her favorite recipe from her new book "Superfood Smoothies."

Entertainment

4 new things we want to eat right…

Eat these new treats this weekend.

Wellbeing

Today in Medicine: Can nicotine prevent Parkinson's?

Plus: Will there one be a cocaine vaccine?