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Guys
and Toys
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The
Real Toy Story. By Eric Clark.
Black Swan. £8.99.
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It
is probably not very surprising to learn that the toy industry is
very competitive, is driven by marketing considerations and is
threatened by children’s growing interest in computers. However,
Eric Clark does add some interesting further considerations.
The
US toy and doll industry is a $22 billion business and is by far the
world’s largest. Two big manufacturing companies (Mattel and
Hasbro) and three big retailers dominate the industry, independent
manufacturers and toyshops having mostly gone bankrupt or been taken
over. The big retailers include Toys R Us and Wal-Mart, the
supermarket chain that sells masses of toys as a way of getting kids
and their parents inside the shops. Manufacturers are desperate for
Toys R Us to survive, since without it Wal-Mart would be so powerful
it would drive down even further the prices it paid to the toy
companies.
Toys
and dolls are also used to entice families into fast-food
restaurants; McDonald’s is now the world’s biggest distributor of
toys. Girls are apparently less keen on fast food than boys, hence
the emphasis on toys aimed at girls being given out with meals for
kids.
Toys
are relatively resistant to ups and downs in the economy, as parents
are reluctant to cut back on buying for their children. A rising
divorce rate helps sales too, as both parents will be buying
separately. Yet the toy industry has one great fear: KGOY, kids
getting older younger and so losing interest in toys. This has been
the case, for instance, with Barbie, the doll that now falls out of
favour by the age of six or seven. A rival, Bratz, is aimed at
pre-teens and features ever-skimpier clothes. As Clark says, this ‘is
all part of the sexualizing of younger target groups for marketing
reasons’.
Games
are mostly made in the US and Europe, since their manufacture is
highly automated. But toy production overwhelmingly takes place in
China. This is partly because labour power there is cheap, of course:
in the case of one electric toy that retailed in the US at $45, just
81 cents were paid in direct labour costs. But it also means that the
suppliers, not the US-based toy companies, have to undertake the
investment in factories and equipment and bear the risk of idle
capacity at quiet periods. All this has backfired recently, however,
with reports of toys made in China being dangerous and having to be
removed from retail shelves.
Clark
also observes that toys nowadays tend to ‘do everything’ and
leave less and less to the child’s imagination and creativity.
Under capitalism the innocence of childhood takes second place to the
demands of marketing and profit-making.
PB
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Peasant
revolt
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Symond
Newell and Kett’s Rebellion,
By Peter E Newell. Past Tense (c/o 56a Info Shop, 56 Crampton Street,
London, SE17). 2007
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Mostly
family history is a rather tedious collection of meaningless names
and dates, occasionally however genealogical research can provide one
with a true insight, a personal link to historical events, thus
demonstrating the reality of what would otherwise be just a story.
Thus it is with Peter Newell’s excellently researched pamphlet. The
essentially economic causes, the rather alarming course of events in
and around what was then England’s second city, Norwich, and
outcome (none too good) of this peasants’ rebellion are clearly
illustrated. All in all this is an interesting and informative
account of a little known incident in English history.
KAZ
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