8 Strength Navy Barbie from the Stars and Stripes Series
This heroic card quite often features a woman prying open a lion's jaws or conquering wild terrain. It stands for courage and righteousness as much as physical force, though reversed it can mean impetuousness, arrogance or petty tyranny. Here is Barbie representing both the positive and negative aspects of the US Armed Forces. (Rider-Waite)
9 The Hermit Paul Frank Barbie from the Designer Series An image of self-sufficiency, The Hermit can emulate the virtues of patience, meditation and inner counsel or the vices of immaturity, antisocial behavior and selfishness. This Barbie is hanging out in her pyjamas, hoarding her shopping loot, preparing for a nice relaxing evening, but what will she do if Skipper calls needing advice? (Rider-Waite)
10 The Wheel of Fortune Fantasy Goddess of Africa from the Bob Mackie Series Representing both the cycle of an individual's life and the prosperity or downfall of entire cultures, the Wheel is concerned with destiny, fate and the inevitability of change. This Barbie stands against lush greenery at what appears to be the peak of the fertile season, wearing a beautifully beaded, embroidered gown that suggests prosperity, yet her blazing headpiece and the red soil in which she stands put me in mind of the inevitable extremes of the cycles of the seasons. (Rider-Waite)
11 Justice Wonder Woman from Barbie Loves Pop Culture
The traditional image for Justice is a blindfolded woman holding the scales, balancing fairness and virtue against a lack of consideration and rigidity. The Amazon superheroine must balance her disguise as an ordinary woman with her use of the Lasso of Truth and indestructible bracelets to bring criminals to justice and help the downtrodden. (Rider-Waite)
12 The Hanging Girl Classic Grace from the Prima Ballerina Collection A card of willing suspension, surrender and readjustment, its flip side is pointless sacrifice and inappropriate passivity. This ballerina is in a position that no Barbie doll can actually achieve on her own; the absurd, unreal proportions of the doll combined with the limitations of her shoes and clothing mean that none of the ballerinas can actually take on ballet poses. And really, neither can real women without a great deal of starvation, body modification and hard work, can they? (Rider-Waite)
13 Death Sterling Silver Rose from the Bob Mackie Series This is a symbol of summation, transformation and release far more than mortality. In fact its most negative meanings are stagnation and inability to move on, not literal death. This Barbie's hair color is clearly not natural; she has remade herself as a brittle silver goddess. Is she growing up or clinging to lost youth? (Rider-Waite)
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