Britney Spears’s memoir is each a horror story and a cautionary story. There’s lots to remove from it, however at its core, it is a story a few girl whose bodily autonomy was primarily stripped from her at a younger age — by her mother and father, by the media, by her companions, and by the world at giant.
“The Girl in Me” is unquestionably Spears’s story, nevertheless it’s additionally a narrative that is been repeated in numerous kinds many instances earlier than. After studying it, sitting in a state of semi-shock whereas digesting the horrors Spears went by way of, I discovered myself considering of Andrew Dominik’s nightmarish 2022 movie, “Blonde,” which portrays a dramatized model of Marilyn Monroe’s life. That movie arguably exploited Monroe’s legacy and repeated among the similar errors it tried to criticize, nevertheless it additionally tells the story of a girl whose look was commodified and profited off of to the purpose that it broken her irreparably.
“There is a motive why girls who misbehave are so typically changed into witches, Jezebels, sirens, Medusas, and different monstrous creatures, and Spears’s phrases remind us of the age-old apply of associating deviant femininity with monstrosity.”
However whereas each “Blonde” and “The Girl in Me” inform the story of ladies whose our bodies have been consistently utilized by each the general public and the boys of their lives, Spears’s memoir is a much better rendition of an analogous narrative, as a result of it is her personal. Like so many individuals who’ve lived by way of comparable experiences, Monroe might now not be capable of inform her personal story, however now that we’ve Spears’s in her personal phrases, we would all do properly to take heed to what she has to say.
And numerous what she says is tough to listen to. From the start, Spears’s memoir traces ways in which her rights to her personal physique and personhood have been commodified, criticized, and stripped away. The primary headlines to come back out in regards to the guide detailed an abortion that Spears says she underwent whereas she was relationship Justin Timberlake, which she says wasn’t her selection.
“If it had been left as much as me alone, I by no means would have completed it,” she writes. “And but Justin was so certain that he did not need to be a father.” The expertise, which she describes as “agonizing,” is a vital reminder that actually free, equitable abortion entry means permitting girls to decide on whether or not or not they need to get abortions, not forcing them to make a sure selection a technique or one other. From begin to end, Spears’s memoir particulars the terrible penalties of what can occur when selection is taken away many instances over.
It isn’t information that Spears’s look was consistently managed and exploited by others over the course of her profession. Throughout her rise within the wilderness of the early 2000s, when thinness was all the fashion and girls have been anticipated to one way or the other each be extremely sexual but additionally candy and demure — although that arguably that hasn’t modified — Spears was each extremely sexualized and demonized for it.
“The Girl in Me” additionally explores simply how a lot of Spears’s profession, look, and decisions weren’t really hers to make in any respect. In her memoir, she claims that she was fully blindsided by her well-known interview with Diane Sawyer — who accused her of getting “upset numerous moms on this nation,” and referred to as her abs “essentially the most useful sq. inch of actual property within the leisure universe,” to call among the interview’s many slights.
However Spears was nonetheless coping with the fallout of her and Timberlake’s breakup when she was knowledgeable by her father that she would converse to Sawyer. “I felt like I had been exploited, arrange in entrance of the entire world,” writes Spears. “That interview was a breaking level for me internally — a swap had been flipped. I felt one thing darkish come over my physique. I felt myself turning, nearly like a werewolf, right into a Unhealthy Particular person.”
There is a motive why girls who misbehave are so typically changed into witches, Jezebels, sirens, Medusas, and different monstrous creatures, and Spears’s phrases remind us of the age-old apply of associating deviant femininity with monstrosity. So typically, girls who do not comply or align with the world’s typically inconceivable requirements typically find yourself demonizing themselves, too, which Spears clearly did at this level, unable to forgive herself for being forcibly contorted into somebody she did not acknowledge.
The nightmare was solely starting for Spears, although. Most of us know the info of what occurred subsequent by now — Spears had two youngsters with Kevin Federline, however misplaced custody of them in 2008. She was then all however compelled right into a residency in Las Vegas, which additionally hearkens to a different story of an exploited megastar, solely this time named Elvis Presley. Pushed right into a Vegas residency by his corrupt supervisor, Elvis spiraled into dependancy and sickness whereas compelled to carry out the identical present over and over on a Las Vegas stage. (In fact, Elvis exercised his personal management over his spouse, Priscilla, which is yet one more instance of how exploitation and ache can ripple from one individual to a different, affecting many lives within the course of.)
“Finally, the memoir is known as a cautionary story. It is also a reminder of the truth that many individuals with far fewer sources and fewer assist than Spears additionally at the moment discover themselves in conservatorships, or in prisons, or in any other case exploitative conditions, typically based mostly on arbitrary errors, dangerous luck, and systemic marginalization.”
Spears’s Las Vegas residency was additionally the start of an unimaginable interval of her life. Whereas nonetheless performing for hundreds of individuals, she was compelled to enter a conservatorship, which subjected her to fixed scrutiny and endless management. She claims that her father took full possession of her funds in addition to what she put into her physique, controlling every part she ate, banning all drugs together with Tylenol and vitamin dietary supplements and consistently criticizing her physique and calling her fats day in and time out. Her workforce would additionally inform potential companions of her sexual historical past, and he or she was not allowed to have extra youngsters. Her physique, as soon as once more, was not hers — solely this time, its outsourcing was all cosigned by the regulation.
Probably the most horrifying side of the guide by far particulars Spears’s journey right into a hellish rehab facility, which she claims she was despatched to after she tried to alter among the choreography in her Las Vegas present. As soon as there, she claims she was not allowed to wash in personal, needed to give blood weekly, wasn’t allowed to make use of the web, needed to sleep together with her door open, and was forcibly placed on lithium. From the sounds of issues, each scrap of management of her physique was taken from her there. Ultimately, Spears says she started believing her household was attempting to kill her, and studying her story, it isn’t onerous to grasp why.
All through the guide, Spears additionally consistently particulars the people-pleasing tendencies that led her to associate with all the above. All she ever needed, she consistently reiterates, was to be good and to make the folks in her life — and finally the entire world — pleased. But it surely was by no means sufficient; she by no means had an opportunity of being sufficient. On the finish of “The Girl in Me,” Spears appears to succeed in an understanding of this as she particulars her new way of living. She now not desires to deal with music. As an alternative, she finally desires her life to be her personal.
And but nonetheless, even in the present day, her life is up for public consumption, and her each transfer remains to be stalked by photographers and the general public. On Instagram, she posts often, typically sharing pictures of herself bare, and people have generated criticism as properly. However as a girl whose physique has been so exploited, exhibiting her pores and skin on her personal phrases looks like her try at a reclamation, identical to shaving her head was: a protest towards all the individuals who profited off of her physique and managed its each transfer, and a prepared embrace of what has been labeled monstrous as a type of discovering liberation.
These days, critics of her Instagram apart, it does appear to be Spears has reclaimed her story. Her each transfer is now not so scrutinized, and he or she has many loving supporters who’ve fought onerous for her freedom and her proper to dwell her life the way in which she desires. Nonetheless, her story just isn’t a completely triumphant one. After the memoir’s launch, Spears lamented her story’s remedy within the media on Instagram, writing that “my motive for this guide was to not harp on my previous experiences which is what the press is doing and it is dumb and foolish !!! I’ve moved on since then !!!” in a screenshot. Whereas one would hope that Spears really needed to put in writing the memoir and that she instructed her story on her phrases, it is finally inconceivable to know the way a lot of it was ghostwritten, or how she actually feels about her story being aired for the world to dissect as soon as once more, which provides one other layer of complexity to the entire story.
Finally, the memoir is known as a cautionary story. It is also a reminder of the truth that many individuals with far fewer sources and fewer assist than Spears additionally at the moment discover themselves in conservatorships, or in prisons, or in any other case exploitative conditions, typically based mostly on arbitrary errors, dangerous luck, and systemic marginalization.
In a submit–Roe v. Wade world, Spears’s story can be an extremely pressing reminder of the significance of permitting girls, and all folks, to have autonomy over their very own our bodies — to have the ability to change them or allow them to be in a approach that feels true to them, not anybody else.
It is also a reminder to look lengthy and onerous at our personal impulse to manage different folks based mostly on arbitrary magnificence requirements or different conventions. We might do properly to recollect Spears’s story the subsequent time a significant star appears to be struggling a breakdown within the public eye, or the subsequent time the web chooses somebody to destroy based mostly on their look or just out of spite. And naturally, we might do properly to verify our impulses to show girls, specifically, into monsters, particularly when they’re merely being human.