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posted by angel028
The Barbie clan began its life as white and remained so until 1967, when “Colored Francie” made her debut. But this Francie doll was produced using the existing head molds for the white Francie, and, other than her dark skin, lacked any other distinguishing African features. The first African American doll in the Barbie دائرے, حلقہ is usually regarded as Christie, who appeared in 1968. It wasn’t until 1980 that actual black and Hispanic Barbie dolls hit the market. Yet despite Mattel’s attempt to take a مزید racially sensitive stance, Ann Ducille, professor of American and African-American literature at the یونیورسٹی of California, San Diego, contends that “white Barbie dolls (are) the norm. Black Barbie is toyland’s ‘but also’ just as black people are society’s ‘but also.’” Professor DuCille quotes a black mother who کہا that although her daughter played with a black Barbie, she still asked for “the real Barbie.”

In 1967, Mattel and Nabisco embarked on a cross-promotion of Barbie and Oreo cookies. Oreo Fun Barbie offered girls the chance to play while sharing “America’s پسندیدہ cookie.” As had become the norm, Mattel manufactured both a white and black version of the doll, apparently unaware that in the African American community “Oreo” has long been a derogatory term for a person who is “black on the outside and white on the inside,” like the chocolate سینڈوچ cookie itself. Black critics took the doll to task and she did very poorly in the marketplace; Mattel recalled the unsold stock, making it highly prized سے طرف کی collectors.
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posted by angel028
Eight months after Barbie’s debut at the Toy Fair, Mrs. Handler was, according to the Los Angeles Times, driving a گلابی Thunderbird and running a half-million-dollar business.

Barbie sales continued strong throughout the early 1960s; her clothing, her accoutrements, and her Dream House adding to skyrocketing success. In 1961, Mattel brought out the ultimate Barbie accessory: Ken, Barbie’s square-jawed, crew-cut sporting steady beau named for Mrs. Handler’s son.

In the late 1960s, with the women’s liberation movement, Barbie seemed out of step with the new social reality and faltered a...
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Source: Mattel,Inc.
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