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[Commlist] Call for Papers: 'Dolls, Dolls, Dolls'
Thu Oct 10 22:29:00 GMT 2024
Call for Papers: Fashion, Style & Popular Culture
Special Issue: ‘Dolls, Dolls, Dolls’
View the full call here>>
https://www.intellectbooks.com/fashion-style-popular-culture#call-for-papers
<https://www.intellectbooks.com/fashion-style-popular-culture#call-for-papers>
Guest Editor: Frank New, Massey University, New Zealand
Existing since the dawn of time, dolls are among the oldest man-made
objects. The oldest known doll – called the Paddle doll – was invented
in Egypt around 2030–1802 BCE during the late Predynastic period. Fast
forward to the 1940s and the production of plastic dolls began. In the
1950s, the German doll Bild Lilli was born, the predecessor to Barbie
launching in 1959 at the New York Toy Fair. The spectrum of dolls is
vast from early dolls made of clay, to baby dolls to action figures to
Voodoo dolls to sex dolls to fashion dolls, and so forth. This Special
Issue aims to serve as a comprehensive wealth of scholarship around the
world of dolls.
Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
*
Paddle Dolls – Exploring the purpose of paddle dolls in Ancient Egypt.
*
Clay Dolls – Looking at socio-cultural history of a region. For
example, clay dolls from Krishnanagar, India, were meant to capture
and recreate everyday life, work, mood and characters.
*
Bisque/Porcelain Dolls – Exploring the differences between the two
types, the variations in value, factors that influence value, bisque
dolls (adult fashion dolls, baby dolls, character dolls),
China/glass dolls.
*
Ceremonial Dolls – Topics to explore: the role which ceremonial
dolls play, the various uses of ceremonial dolls in different
cultures, symbolism, rituals, etc.
*
Voodoo Dolls – Examining the origins, duality and cultural diversity
of voodoo dolls.
*
Paper Dolls – Looking at paper dolls as artefacts that illustrated
the social expectations for women at particular moments in time, how
paper dolls communicated wealth, paper dolls in pop culture, etc.
*
Puppets – Exploring how puppets are used in such areas such as music
therapy, early language development, education and children with
disabilities. The origins of puppetry, the impact of television on
puppetry, the contemporary use of puppets in art and activism, the
world of Jim Henson.
*
Fashion Dolls – (Barbie, Sindy, Disney, Bratz, Monster High)
Exploring how fashion dolls have shaped pop culture, association of
body image to Barbie, fandom and participatory culture, dolls and
consumer culture, notices of alternative lifestyles, such as punk.
*
Sex Dolls – Examining sex and fantasy, the ‘realness’, ancient
origins of sex dolls, brothel dolls, ’Teddy Babes’, etc.
*
Queer Dolls – Mattel releases Earring Magic Ken, dubbed ‘Queer Ken’,
how it gained an homoerotic consumer base overnight, and Mattel
pulled it from the shelves, the Billy Doll, etc.
*
Action Figures – ‘Dolls for boys’, GI Joe and its cultural impact,
how the 1980s shifted to include action figures geared towards
girls, the homoerotism of action figures through body sculpt and
clothing.
*
Historical Dolls – For example, Leo Moss, African-American doll
maker from Macron, Georgia. American Girl dolls, the nostalgia and
legacy
*
Fashion, Dolls, Art – Dolls as a fashion accessory, dolls as
mannequins (The House of Viktor & Rolfat the Barbican, exhibition
outfits displayed on lifesize porcelain dolls, Barbie as a lifesize
mannequin, Rootstein), modern doll artists/photographers (doll
dioramas, celebrity dolls), the connection between dolls and
fashion, horror dolls (Living Dead dolls, Elvira doll).
Deadline for submissions: 1 December 2025
Papers will not be considered unless they follow Intellect house style
guidelines.
Papers should be approximately 5000–7500 words in length, and must
include a title, keywords, full names of authors (with indication of
corresponding author), affiliation, contact details and a short
biography of around 150 words for each contributing author.
Papers are accepted on a rolling basis and are reviewed as they arrive.
All papers are double-blind peer reviewed for acceptance into the journal.
Please send abstracts to Frank New, Massey University:
(FrankNew /at/ FrankieNew.com)
For questions regarding submissions or enquiries regarding the journal
please contact Joseph Hancock: (joseph.hancockii /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(joseph.hancockii /at/ gmail.com)>
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