Sunday, June 22, 2008

Great Family Movie: Kit Kittredge, An American Girl

I cried throughout the G-rated movie, Kit Kittredge, An American Girl. This was a good thing.

It's just that for the first time in I don't know how long, I could sit through an entire movie targeting the tween set (ages 8-12, approximately) and not cringe, wince, or moan. Not even once.

And for the first time in, oh, forever, I could sit alongside my nine-year-old daughter and not only delight in her company, but feel good about the messages she was receiving from images on a screen - messages about compassion, pride, tenacity, and perseverance.

For that I have to thank the film's director and producers, who include Patricia Rozema, Elaine Goldsmith-Thomas, Lisa Gillan, Ellen Brothers, Marisa Yeres, and Julia Roberts (yes - that Julia Roberts), and, of course, the savvy advertising agency that gave me and my daughter the opportunity to pre-screen the movie.

Rest assured, we'll be seeing it again.

Kit Kittredge, An American Girl is the first feature film based on the American Girl series of dolls and books, a phenomenon as frighteningly popular as it is refreshing and pure. In this age of suggestive Dollz, virtual worlds, dubious Disneyfied role models, and contradictory messages about sex, violence, success, and power bombarding kids from every angle, the whole American Girl concept is a breath of fresh air.

As is the movie, which stars the lovely young talent Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine, Nim's Island) in the lead role as Kit Kittredge, and a bevy of supporting stars to round out the cast, the likes of which include Joan Cusack (love her!), Chris O'Donnell, Julia Ormond, Stanley Tucci, and Jane Krakowski - as well as Will Smith's adorable daughter and Max Thieriot, a teen heart throb on the rise.

Set in Cincinnati, Ohio at the dawn of the Great Depression, the story of Kit Kittredge paints a picture of a time in American history that seems eerily familiar today - a time in which unemployment and financial woes stressed families to the breaking point, a time when no family was immune to the real threats of hunger and homelessness.

Through Kit's eyes we experience the Depression as it rolls over her community like a terrible wave, wrenching families apart and bringing new ones together. Desperate times, as well as the desperate measures of the times, are presented in a sweet and age-appropriate way, but never sugar-coated. Even the most stoic of moviegoers will grow misty-eyed as the lively plot unfolds and the engaging characters navigate their survival in an uncertain world.

If you ask me, a movie like Kit Kittredge, An American Girl is exactly what all of us need right about now - and especially all of us American girls, boys, women, and men.

For a detailed synopsis of the movie, I would encourage you to check out Roger Ebert's review, and certainly, if you're looking for some wholesome, heartwarming, and educational family entertainment this summer, go see this movie.

You'll be pleasantly surprised by the experience, as I was, and might even find yourself reaching for a tissue.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Opting In: On Women, Work, Motherhood, and Choice


About a month ago, I was thrilled to see that author/feminist Amy Richards would be visiting an excellent nearby independent book store to discuss her latest book, Opting In: Having a Child without Losing Yourself. Unfortunately, I could not make the event but I had every intention of running out to buy the book as soon as I could. Books about women and work/life balance and motherhood and choices are especially appealing when you're living the issues.

I am living the issues.

So of course I was beyond thrilled when Amy Richards herself sent me a copy of her book (THANK YOU, AMY!), and since then I've been reading and digesting and nodding my head vigorously and shaking my fists in the air and, most of all, feeling incredibly grateful to Amy Richards for her remarkable work.

I wish I had this book in high school.

But then again, back when I was in high school in the eighties, professional, educated women weren't "opting out" of the workforce in droves* and willingly abandoning their careers to become financially dependent caregivers to their children. This "opt out" trend (or "revolution" as writer Lisa Belkin curiously termed it) was featured a few years ago in a New York Times Magazine cover story, prompting women like me to get all huffy and authors like Leslie Bennetts (The Feminine Mistake: Are We Giving Up Too Much) to write a book cautioning women about the risks of financial dependence and espousing the non-financial benefits of work.

Back when I was in high school, I never doubted that I could do and be anything I wanted. Then, of course, I spent a year as a West Point cadet - which, incidentally, I wrote about here with regard to "feminism" - and, suffice it to say, I finally realized I was a woman, and as such, would have to think very carefully about the choices I made from that point forward.

That's not to say I abandoned the "do anything/be anything" philosophy that was instilled in me as a child. I maintained the belief that I could pursue everything I ever wanted and more - education, career, spouse, kids, happily ever after - simply by choosing the path that was right for me.

I chose, and before long I had the education, career, spouse, and all the makings of happily ever after. I spent a few blissful months at home after my daughter was born, and then went back to a full-time job outside the home. Just as I planned.

What didn't figure into my plan was giving birth to a second child with a potentially devastating medical condition. If you're so inclined, you can read all the high drama I recounted in a trilogy of soggy blog posts, from the shocking Part 1 to the agonizing Part 2 to the happiest of endings (beginnings?) in Part 3. This unexpected course of events spurred by my son's birth radically changed all my "plans" and, as it turns out, the course of my life and career. THANK GOD.

Right now, despite the chaos and hardships that come with "opting in" to multiple jobs both inside and outside the home while trying to be an active parent, a wife, an enthusiastic tennis hack and a generally "balanced" person, I know my choices were right for me.

I also know that I am judged by my choices - as all women are. And sadly, our harshest critics are often other women.

In Opting In: Having a Child without Losing Yourself, Amy Richards does not judge; rather, she explains, reflects, reports, and analyzes. She disarms and engages her readers by laying it all on the table - work, the wheres/whens/hows of procreation, the undeniable influence of our mothers, the hows of "giving birth" and parenting, and division of labor at home. Through the context of history, feminist theory, sociological research, and personal experience, she gives us a lens with which to view ourselves and our most personal of choices.

To me, Amy Richards is like the smartest, most self-aware girlfriend you know - the one whose counsel you seek when it really matters. She never tells you what to do; she simply helps you understand a situation so that you can decide all by yourself what it is that you need to do.

And that is the resounding message of this book: Do what's right for you. Trust your instincts.

Amen, Amy. Amen.

I will be reading and re-reading this book for a long time to come. I urge you to do the same.

Here are a few excerpts I highlighted in my dog-eared, ink-stained book:

I want parents to be inspired to own motherhood and parenting in their own unique way without valuing someone else's experience over their own.

Sadly, working and not working are perceived not as two distinct choices, but rather as a competition about who has made the better choice.

Our priority should be making it possible for women to make choices that don't feel so limiting about if and when to have babies.

Each woman wants different things; thus the feminist goal should be figuring out what
you want.

Glibly ridiculing another woman can be anti-woman, but examining the reasons why women feel the need to diminish one another is entirely feminist.

Staying balanced is a great example to give your children; to be consumed with your children at the expense of your own identity ends up punishing both you and them in the end.

The real "trend" isn't women choosing careers or babies, but, as I hope
Opting In proves, actual women who feel confident and energized to define for themselves who they want to be.

*supposedly, according to Belkin's article