In the "More Things Change, the More they Stay the Same" department, I found it funny that the articles I've read about Olivia Rodrigo's babydoll dress tend not to mention the 1956 film Baby Doll that popularised the garment. At that time, according to Wikipedia:
Baby Doll courted controversy before its release with the display of a promotional billboard in New York City that depicted [the film's star, Carroll] Baker lying in a crib and sucking her thumb. Cardinal Spellman urged both Catholics and non-Catholics to avoid the film, deeming it a moral danger.
The film is about a middle aged man married to a nineteen year old girl. Now, Olivia Rodrigo has been criticised for wearing that same notorious garment. She doesn't defend herself very cogently but she shouldn't have to. That's the job of a critic, not an artist.
The article linked to at Bustle decries the possibility of "sexualising" Rodrigo. The astounding bad faith in this premise makes the enormous leap of ignoring trends of sexually provocative costumes and performances in popular music for the past 70 years. Of course part of the point of such costumes is to look sexy. Sex is part of human nature and so, therefore, is sexual attraction and it absolutely has a place in popular art because it reflects who we are.
But does the babydoll dress somehow encourage paedophilia? Rodrigo is 23 years old but as in the 1956 movie the idea is of course to tease a woman in a juvenile aesthetic. Why is this sexy? Is it normalising paedophilia? Desmond Morris one opined that women had juvenile physical features in contrast to men--larger eyes, slimmer shoulders, higher voice pitch, and less body hair--in order to provoke a protective impulse in men. So the single instinct the human being has to be protective of children triggered by physical features does double duty. One could ask, I suppose, which came first. Do women look like children or do children look like women?
"What is it about schoolgirls?" asked Elias Koteas in Exotica, a movie I talked about last week. In that movie, in which a main character is a stripper whose shtick is to wear schoolgirl uniforms, the answer is that theoretically schoolgirls are pure, they lack the "baggage" of adults. In Oingo Boingo's "Little Girls", a song which, despite how it's typically regarded, really mocks paedophiles, singer Danny Elfman sings from the point of view of a paedophile:
They don't care if I'm a one-way mirror
Well, they're not frightened by my cold exterior
They don't ask me questions
They don't want to scold me
They don't look for answers
They just want to hold me
Of course, anyone who's seen Mean Girls or spent quality time with teenage girls will know that it's absurd to say that young girls aren't judgemental. Part of maturing to adulthood is learning to be less judgemental of people who are unlike oneself, not more judgemental. This idea of innocence in children has little to do with actual children. Real innocence is often cruel. It's only by shielding children from situations in which they would have to make complicated moral choices that we create the illusion of their infallible benevolence. To a child, our adult world is in many ways horrific.
Arguably, the juvenile aesthetic is meant to evoke childish as often as it does childlike qualities. That the idea of an adult acting with the amorality of a child is worthy of punishment. This is a fundamental idea behind S&M and the enticement of the term "naughty" in an adult context. But this is by definition not an encouragement to paedophilia since it requires an adult transgressing by adopting juvenile qualities. To say that the tease of a woman wearing a babydoll encourages paedophilia is sort of like saying the Hamburglar encourages theft. But I suppose I can see how the Hamburglar might be too sophisticated for certain segments of society.