Barbies In Vietnam
From Rohcmc@pd.state.gov Mon Nov 17 13:45:05 2003
Date: Tue, 11 Nov 2003 08:17:00 +0700
From: "Ogburn, Robert" <Rohcmc@pd.state.gov>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: RE: FW: discovery in hanoi
...and Barbie dolls have now entered the local market. There is a toy
store off Le Duan that has them, as well as the Metro warehouse stores.
I recall Mart Stewart saying that he had queried teachers in the Delta
this past summer and only one or two had ever heard of Barbies. Is this
an economic development indicator or a cultural devolution indicator???
robert o.
-----Original Message-----
From: Gilbert [mailto:MGilbert@ngcsu.edu]
Sent: Tuesday, November 11, 2003 1:17 AM
To: Vietnam Studies Group
Subject: Re: FW: discovery in hanoi
At this site, I discovered also that Britany Spears has been discoved
the by Vietnamese media, though I may not be the first to discover this.
Professor Marc Jason Gilbert
Department of History
North Georgia College and State University
Dahlonega, Georgia 30597
Phone: (706) 864-1911
Fax: (706) 864-1873
E-mail: mgilbert@ngcsu.edu
From MGilbert@ngcsu.edu Mon Nov 17 13:47:24 2003
Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2003 13:09:58 -0500
From: Gilbert <MGilbert@ngcsu.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: RE: FW: discovery in hanoi
There may be a good student paper in the marketing parallels raised
by "Barbie in the Delta". Just as American cigarette companies
push their products in more distant lands as the popularity of their
products decline in the land of their birth, so may Barbie, who is losing
ground
in the USA to a hip-hop inspired set of dolls. When _these_ arrive in
the market at, say, Vinh Long, Barbie may have no place to go but
Burma, regrettably so, as their own puppet traditions are very close
to my heart (and all over my house). But I think the Delta remains safe
from Hip Hop for now.
I did buy an Indian Barbie while in Madras (Chennai). My god-daughter
said she would not speak to me unless I came back with it.
Marc
From dbiggs@u.washington.edu Mon Nov 17 13:47:33 2003
Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2003 11:24:56 -0800 (PST)
From: D. Biggs <dbiggs@u.washington.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Barbie in the Delta
Dear List,
I'm sorry I missed the first part of the thread, but Marc's title made
me laugh at the thought of so many dolls spreading out into the toy
stalls of
markets across the Mekong Delta. I dare to say that Mattel won't stand
a chance of earning the kinds of profits that Philip Morris-VN does
because there is a flood of plastics--toys, washbins, robot transformers--that
moves here from southern China on every old, rickety xe do. It would
be interesting to see whether children's toys can become controlled
status symbols the same way that Hennessy, Remy Martin, Marlboro and
other adult pleasures do. One thing that has always impressed me in
the countryside is the way that children can improvise very complex
games using the most rudimentary "toys"--flip flops, cardboard
as sleds on sand dunes, plastic bags, palm fronds, cracked washtubs,
and on and on. Almost anything, barbie-ized or not, may become a "toy".
I suppose a student paper could
quickly turn into a sophisticated analysis if someone was to think about
controlling children's desire for "toys you can't live without
that you
saw on tv or the internet". As that Saigon disco song goes, this
may be an extension of the "barbie world: life in plastic, its
fantastic!"
Cheers,
David Biggs-UW
From thompsonc2@southernct.edu Mon Nov 17 13:47:44 2003
Date: Wed, 12 Nov 2003 15:44:47 -0500
From: C. Michele Thompson <thompsonc2@southernct.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Barbie in hanoi
Dear Everyone,
When I was in Ha Noi for most of the Summer of 1999 my landlady's 5
year old grandaughter had about 10 of them and adored
them and all of their various outfits. However at that time, at least
as far as I know, all of them had been given to her by
relatives or friends of the family who had purchased them while traveling
abroad. They had also found a local seamstress willing to
make new outfits for the dolls.
cheers
Michele
From OJHM.Salemink@fsw.vu.nl Mon Nov 17 13:47:50 2003
Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2003 09:11:03 +0100
From: Oscar Salemink <OJHM.Salemink@fsw.vu.nl>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: RE: Barbie in hanoi
I have lived from 1996 to 2001 in Hanoi with my family including two
daughters, and was forced to notice that somewhere in 1997/8 barbie
dolls and lego started to become available in the local market, with
little selection and at inflated prices. My daughters told me to go
get them in Bangkok instead.... In the late 1990s special Lego stores
sprang up in various places.
Oscar Salemink
From Mart.Stewart@wwu.edu Mon Nov 17 13:47:57 2003
Date: Fri, 14 Nov 2003 06:48:38 -0800
From: Mart Stewart <Mart.Stewart@wwu.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Hanoi Barbie
And now Barbie is in Hanoi in full force -- in a shop completely, wall
to wall, ceiling to floor, to her. With a few Kens for good measure,
and accessories in the center of the shop. I don't know who is buying
-- the prices are high and the shop was empty except for a napping clerk
when I passed by early this week.
Mart Stewart
From MGilbert@ngcsu.edu Tue Nov 25 09:58:17 2003
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 11:50:00 -0500
From: Gilbert <MGilbert@ngcsu.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: From Veg. Oil Tin Toys to Mass Market
Glad to see David got into the spirit of my post on Barbie in the Delta.
I have made a point of taking up toys produced by children since 1986,
when I realized that market forces were destroying even the desire for
such craft. I have children-produced cardboard templates for the making
of paper buses in Tanzania, home made vegetable oil tin versions of
those buses and the mass-market oil tin version of the same buses. In
HCMC, I remember a similar pattern moving much faster, with mass produced
toy helicopters made of oil tin material which never carried
any grease rapidly replacing the hand made variety in the 90s. I am
sure we have all seen these oil tin products in urban markets; they
are
omnipresent--an interesting faux-poverty cultural artifact of globalization.
Are they all now made in China, I wonder?
Professor Marc Jason Gilbert
Department of History
North Georgia College and State University
Dahlonega, Georgia 30597
Phone: (706) 864-1911
Fax: (706) 864-1873
E-mail: mgilbert@ngcsu.edu
From hhtai@fas.harvard.edu Tue Nov 25 09:58:55 2003
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 12:05:51 -0500
From: Hue Tam H. Tai <hhtai@fas.harvard.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: From Veg. Oil Tin Toys to Mass Market
Marc:
In 1995, I visited professor Van Tao in his home in Hanoi. His 8-year
old grandson was there, playing beneath a massive ancestral altar. He
was playing Super Mario. When I was a child in Saigon in the 1950s,
all we had to play with were marbles for boys and chopsticks for girls.
Hue-Tam
From MGilbert@ngcsu.edu Tue Nov 25 09:59:47 2003
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 13:08:56 -0500
From: Gilbert <MGilbert@ngcsu.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: New Game: Bac Tranh's Maze of Mystery
Perhaps this is why I am now interested in Vietnamese spirit possession.
We need to find some subtext to draw the child to look up at the altar,
not necessarily to worship there, but to know that life's puzzles are
more engaging and the experience of one second of life's mysteries is
worth more than a lifetime of video play. [What a hopeless romantic
I am!]
However, there is a simple commercial film called The Seven Faces of
Doctor Lau (with Tony Randall as Lao Tzu) that can do that. So it is
not
impossible. But we may have to wait until all the world's 17-25 year
olds become middle aged when, for most, toys will lose their
attraction.
As darkness falls, The games box is put away;
Temple bells beckon.
Marc
Professor Marc Jason Gilbert
Department of History
North Georgia College and State University
Dahlonega, Georgia 30597
Phone: (706) 864-1911
Fax: (706) 864-1873
E-mail: mgilbert@ngcsu.edu
From bcampdvs@u.washington.edu Thu Apr 15 10:26:43
2004
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 09:54:44 -0800 (PST)
From: bradley camp davis <bcampdvs@u.washington.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: From Veg. Oil Tin Toys to Mass Market
Marc-
a side note. when i was an intern at the Civil Rights Institute in
Birmingham, AL, my department organized a summer school for grade schoolers.
we hired an "mbira" (hand pianos) maker from zimbabwe i think
it was. he demanded that we acquire 30 olive oil cans for the kids to
use for their mbiras. he said it would be more authentic, that the polished
wooden ones are generally too expensive for children.
Bradley Davis
University of Washington
From MGilbert@ngcsu.edu Thu Apr 15 10:26:53 2004
Date: Mon, 17 Nov 2003 13:19:11 -0500
From: Gilbert <MGilbert@ngcsu.edu>
Reply-To: vsg@u.washington.edu
To: Vietnam Studies Group <vsg@u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: From Veg. Oil Tin Toys to Mass Market
Odd, how somehow we survived such unsafe toys of tin and wood and metal!
And jungle gyms without rubber landing pads! Only jungle! (so to speak).
Thanks; it is not often I think of hand pianos!
Marc
Professor Marc Jason Gilbert
Department of History
North Georgia College and State University
Dahlonega, Georgia 30597
Phone: (706) 864-1911
Fax: (706) 864-1873
E-mail: mgilbert@ngcsu.edu
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