144 Children’s
Folklore
Woman, Teenage
Mutant Ninja Turtles, and other well-known figures. It is not
unusual for babies and dogs to wear Halloween costumes of their own. Children
begin participating in Halloween by wearing costumes their parents have bought
or made, but as they get older, they may choose to make costumes that reflect
their own imaginations.
Some dolls have associated themselves with horror legends in interesting ways.
Hasbro’s “My Buddy” doll, released in 1985, resembles the “Chucky” doll that
becomes a demonic killer in the horror movie
Child’s Play
(1988). These movies
have become cult classics, with the hilarious
Bride of Chucky
(1998)
generating a
line of bride dolls that has delighted both children and adults.
More peaceful and aesthetically appealing dolls have come from the American
Girl doll company, founded by educator Pleasant Rowland in 1985. This com-
pany offers historically accurate facsimiles of American children’s clothes, pets,
and playthings from the colonial era to the present. Each doll, which comes with
a set of books about her adventures, is described as the “star of her story.” Or-
phaned Samantha, who represents the Victorian era, has a three-wheeled bicycle,
California baby boy dressed as Benjamin Bunny for
Halloween, 2006. Photograph by Buzz Hays.
Contexts 145
a tea-tin lunchbox, a doll pram, and ice skates. Addy,
enslaved on a plantation
in the 1860s, has a tin pail lunchbox and ice cream party treats. Josefina, whose
family owns a ranch in New Mexico in the 1820s, has a weaving loom, riding
boots, an adobe oven, and a niña doll, as well as Christmas accessories that reflect
Hispanic holiday traditions: two strings of red chili peppers and a wooden lan-
tern for
La Posada
processions. And Kaya, a Nez Perce girl growing up in 1764,
has a horse with a special saddle, a porcupine-quill necklace, a baby doll with
cradleboard, and huckleberries and camas roots inside a leather pouch. Through
these
heirloom dolls, children learn about folkways of children from diverse eth-
nicities and historical periods.
Some twenty-first-century dolls have generated controversy. Bratz Dolls, first
manufactured in 2001, have wide eyes, tiny noses, and feet attached to high-
fashion shoes; much of their clothing looks alluring. Wildly popular in Spain,
France, Israel, Italy, the United Kingdom, and the United States, these dolls have
alarmed parents, teachers, and scholars of childhood. In 2007
the American Psy-
chological Association’s “Task Force on Sexualization of Girls” commented that
Bratz dolls, which wear fishnet stockings, miniskirts, and feather boas, sexually
objectify young women.
In play therapy, dolls help children express their needs. Virginia M. Axline’s
Dibs in Search of Self
(1986) explains how a little boy overcomes adjustment dif-
ficulties through regular doll play in his therapist’s office.
Play and Intervention
(1994), edited by Joop Hellendoorn, Rimmert van der Kooij,
and Brian Sutton-
Smith, covers a wide range of therapies involving dolls and toys. One of this
book’s essays, Jerome L. Singer’s “Scientific Foundation of Play Therapy,” explains
that the “cognitive revolution of twentieth-century psychology resulted in a wide
range of interventions” (27). Psychologists have developed academic play pro-
grams and play therapies for children with autism and other special needs.
In his 2008 essay “To Play or Not to Play,” Sutton-Smith states, “In the 21st
century virtually any activity is considered superior to doing nothing.” Noting
educators’ preference for all that seems “useful,” Sutton-Smith argues that “play has
its
own
purposes that are more fundamental.” Studying these purposes will pro-
vide interesting and important work for future folklorists of childhood.
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