Laura MacDonald
highlights an “excellent discussion of the American Girl brand by Maurya
Wickstrom in Performing Consumers (2006).”
Steve Railton
remembers when hula hoops “became ubiquitous in Sunset Park, the housing
development I grew up in. My own
favorite way to play with one was as a traditional hoop -- i.e. I liked seeing
how far I could roll it before it fell, etc., though I'd never played with the kind of
hoop that kids played with for centuries.
It is interesting to think, though, that physically adding ‘hula’
doesn't change the ‘hoop’ at all, but culturally, it sure made a huge
difference in what hoops were used to do.”
Rebecca
D’Orsogna notes the poster for an “Uncle
Tom Opera” that appears in the background of a scene in the animated Disney
film Lady and the Tramp (1955, but set in 1909).
Suggested
reading to follow up the Uncle Tom’s
Cabin post and on the intersections between race, childhood, toys, and more:
Robin Bernstein’s Racial Innocence (2011).
Responding to
the post on tabletop role playing games, Kisha Tracy notes that “it's interesting (sometimes sadly, sometimes
otherwise) that the table top RPG history has mostly been male. It took a very
long time for women to be ‘allowed’ into it. I'm always kind of fascinated by
the marginalization within marginalized groups/activities.”
Joseph Adelman shares this interview
with historian Jill Lepore, on her recent/ongoing work that definitely
connects to this series in lots of interesting ways.
More next week,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Plenty of room to add your voice to the mix!
6/16
Memory Day nominee: Geronimo, or
Goyathlay, the Apache
leader and warrior whose legendary life has inspired numerous cultural responses and texts, but
should not blind us to the very
real and often dark
histories to which he also connects.
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