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Monday, October 19, 2009

Little Addy Walker, Sitting On A Plantation

New York folks, I am presenting at the Brooklyn Cool Twitter Conference TOMORROW! Click here for details and come through if you want to see how my speaking voice is a lot different than you expected.

I have not forgotten about the questions from readers I solicited for my next YouTube video. It's just that I don't feel cute lately and I be too tired after work anyway I am having some technical difficulties. But I will get that up for you soon, I promise!Also, if I have a link to your blog on here (or you feel that I have erroneously left you off my links list), send me an email at sister.toldja@thebeautifulstruggler.com. I am working on a new site design and I'm not bringing you with me if you ain't with me, you dig?

Picture this. Chicago, 1994.

We had been "accidentally" receiving a neighbor's American Girl catalogues for about a year. I poured over them each month or so, longing for the real-sized version of Samantha's clothes and wishing that there was a Black American Girl for me. White dolls did not fly in my house. My parents didn't buy them for me and I never asked for one. I did have a Latina Police Officer Barbie, but I just pretended she was light skinned. Until her, all my dolls were darker than me and I wanted for there to be one who looked more like I did.

Finally, the pre-Christmas catalogue comes and THERE IS A BLACK DOLL. Even though I was 9 and approaching the end of my interest in dolls, I practically peed on myself with excitement. I ran straight to my mother bent on demanding the $95 dollar doll.



Little Toldja: MOMMY! MOMMY! THERE IS A BLACK AMERICAN GIRL DOLL AND I WANT HER! HER NAME IS ADDY AND I HAVE TO HAVE HER FOR KWANZAA! I HAVE TO! I HAVE TO!

Mom: (excited) Really? A Black one? It's about time! Who is she?

Little Toldja: SHE IS A RUNAWAY SLAVE!

Mom: (silence)


Now, I was a very culturally aware little girl and I took Addy's story to be a great way to teach little girls who were not as aware as I about the cruelty of slavery. Her story (written by Connie Briscoe, who is a great author of adult lit as well) was very realistic and one that I think more children should read. However, there was a part of me then and now that wishes that Addy had instead been a girl Civil Rights Movement. A child of the 60s or 70's with a little doll Afro! While she is courageous (she and her family escape from slavery), she's still a tragic figure (she and her mother are separated from her father and brother and, yeah, SHE WAS A SLAVE).

Perhaps had there been another Black American Girl in the 15 years since Addy, that would make Adult Toldja feel a little bit better about her slave baby doll. In addition to the Historical collection, AG also makes the Girl Of The Year line: one modern doll per year with a special story. In 8 years, there hasn't been a Black one. I still love my Addy Walker and she has moved from my mother's house to Howard and all the way to Brooklyn with me. But I just wish that for all the little girls-Black, White and otherwise-who are still American Girl consumers, there was some other representation of Black American life beyond the horrors of the plantation.

I encountered a lot of White girls who had or really wanted Addy dolls, likely because kids seem to be fascinated by otherness. I like the idea of teaching little White kids about slavery but again, why is the ONLY historical girl a slave? I mentioned Addy once before and a commenter who is White with a mixed daughter mentioned that her little girl burst in to tears in the American Girl store upon discovering that the only Black AG was a slave.

We cannot solely rely upon non-Black companies to adequately represent us (even though criticism is still fair game). That said, I am interested in finding out about any Black owned doll manufacturers or any doll lines that have other historically accurate stories about Black life attached to them. When I was a kid, there was the Black owned Olmec company's multicultural dolls. Imani and Menelik where the Barbie and Ken of the line, decked out in classic 90's Kente looks:

I have this very doll in the box at home right now, thanks to the eBay gods!

Unfortunately, the company went under (and this book claims there was some crazy stuff going on between Olmec, the Clinton Administration and China) If you know of any existing companies, please shout them out in the comments section!

15 props:

arieswym said...

I loved my Imani doll, the only one I didn't destroy and I'm still upset that my neighbor moved and took my autographed Addy books...Those were the days

msdailey said...
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msdailey said...
This post has been removed by the author.
msdailey said...

Sorry for the multiple post and the deletions.

Ever hear of Huggy Bean

http://www.angelfire.com/az/ethnicdollstwo/page4.html

I bought the girl doll for my god daughter and the boy doll for my son, we still have it.

http://cgi.ebay.com/17-HUGGY-BEAN-BLACK-DOLL-GOLDEN-RIBBON-PLAYTHINGS-1984_W0QQitemZ400072124235QQcmdZViewItemQQptZLH_DefaultDomain_0?hash=item5d2628274b

Cheekie said...

I was an American Girls STAN (I was even in that club they had, had the American Girl's play CD-ROM...lol) during my childhood. Unfortunately, there was a bad flood in my mama's basement and my Addy doll was destroyed with mold when I was a teen. I was SUPER upset because I wanted to savor that forever.

Lite Bread said...

Ms. Toldja,
I smell a Reader Contest here.
Create your own American Girl story! Pick it all, time period, history, physical setup and everything.
I happen to think it would be fascinating to see the ideas of your superb reading audience.

And, Ms. Toldja, this is why I never would believe about you what you expressed in “Hard in the Paint”. You surprise me at times by exposing such a soft, tender and feminine side that sometimes gets obscured by the issues you write so passionately about. I think you’d be a total ‘softy’ in real, face-to-face life. And that’s a good thing.

I get to submit a question?! Something respectful. Really? (And, NO, it wouldn’t be about your dating choices, lol).

DopeGyrlFresh06 said...

OMG...I still have my Addy doll too! I'm looking at her right now. I still have all my books too. havent kept up with the American Girls since I was abiout 10, but I would have sworn that AG would have had at least one other Black doll by now. That's amazing/sad.

They came under fire for their latest doll, Gwen, whose storyline deals with homelessness. They seem to have a little bit of an issue with stories for girls who don't fit your typical "American Apple Pie" image.

Sister Toldja said...

Ms. Dailey-OMG! HUGGY BEAN! I do remember her, but I don't know why I didn't have one. I was telling someone earlier that my mom, having had limited Black doll options in the 50s, got me damn near every Black doll that they made so she could play with them!

Lite Bread- I do realize that my personality and experiences touch upon a varied aspects of Black/American/female life. However, I don't see a dichotomy between being a hardcore feminist and a "traditionally" feminine woman. Unless we are using stereotypes as our metric. Furthermore, when I hear "softy", I hear "you talk tough, but I bet you ain't tough", which is far from the truth. I am a kind and loving person, but I am not a "softy".

The Narcist said...

bringing back memories. I remember all of the American Girls especially Addy. I can't believe your parents were generous enough to buy you the $95 doll!!! that was something that was never under my christmas tree. i like another commenters idea of writing/designing a new black AG story/doll. i love reading creative writing.

Lite Bread said...

Ms. Toldja,
No, I don’t see a dichotomy either. I was rather making reference, in understanding of what you expressed in “Hard in the Paint”, that Others think of it as a dichotomy; that you can’t be both forthright but also possess a caring heart.

As far as “softy”, you’re just better with words than I am – you replied “I am a kind and loving person”. I will believe that and that’s all I meant. As far as the personally critical direction of trying to imply ‘you talk tough, but ain’t tough’, honestly, that wasn’t even on my mind. Sorry if it sounded like that.

Sasha said...

I remember reading all the Addy books and getting the catalog every season. I peed on myself when I saw the price of the doll and knew my mom would say no.

TheBeez said...

I remember having the Addy books, but never getting the dolls. I did have a Kenya doll, with the "magic" hair styling lotion.

On an semi- unrelated note, did you knwo that American Girl is releasing (or has released) a homeless doll for these tough economic times? Yeah, it's still $95, but her stories will illustrate (to the richies who can afford them) the plight of the poor family. Hooray...?

missprettyphd said...

I was SO sexually attracted to Menelik. He was beautiful and he didn't have the same "please like me, I'm harmless" smile that Ken's black friend had. I acted out a lot of sexual fantasies with him and the Asha doll. All these years later, my fantasy man still looks like Menelik-- slope haircut and all.

Otherwise known as Gingivitis said...

LMAO@ that girl bein sexually attracted to Melenik! I had the Addy book but not the doll. But then I was all kinds of interested in slavery stuff cuz they didn't teach it at the white school I went to. I honestly didn't know they still made the American Girl series after the little jewish girl who escaped to America with the glasses and whatnot during WWII. What the hell else is there after the Civil Rights Movement? Are we now including survivors of the Cold War or somethin?

Goldilocs said...

AH! I remember My Addy doll! I always wanted that one samatha because I liked her dresses, but then when I opened the catalog and saw Addy I went right to my parents and said I need this doll! I got her books and everything! Even got her a little wicker chair to sit on so she reigned supreme to the rest of my dolls and barbies, yup even to Kenya with her magic hair stuff (@ The Beez) I rememebr her little gold hoop earrings and how I had to have a pair JUST like hers.... too bad I have NO idea where Addy is anymore, shame.