news&views Spring 2019 | Page 43

were the oldest toys as well as symbols of magic and religious rituals, protection, wealth, and messengers of gods and ancestors. They were made from clay, stone, wood, leather, and bone. I remember my first doll from the fifties. Patsy had rubber extremities, a wooden head, and a stuffed cloth body. I drooled over the Barbara Ann Scott doll and the bride dolls in the Simpsons-Sears and Eaton’s Christmas catalogues. Today, we have American Girl dolls who become whatever ‘being’ you want by allowing a choice of hair, skin, eye colour, and size. Cabbage Patch dolls were in high demand for a few years, and everyone knows Barbie, GI Joe, and all the Action Figures. Some time ago, I spotted a Minuk doll made by American Girl. Minuk is my maiden name, so you can imagine my surprise at seeing this tiny (nine inch) parka- clad doll on a stand being sold as a display doll. The company said the name meant ‘frozen dew’ in Yup’ik. There was a trademark symbol near the name, and that put up my hackles. I wrote to American Girl and asked if their trademark prevented me from using my own name. They said no; I could still use my own name. Generous of them! Joyce says, “Doll collections present a tangible window into another place and time, which compels one to further research their context within that history.” Whoever thought of using dolls as a teaching tool? Although doll collection is no longer prominent in Joyce’s life, she says her dolls are always present in her heart. When Joyce and her sister moved from a large family home in Calgary to a smaller apartment in BC, she had to decide which dolls she could take with her into limited space. She took very few. Those dolls’ siblings now reside in a storage facility in Calgary. She says she felt sad and regretted relegating the dolls she loved to such a meagre existence. But she knows that they are comfortable and are waiting patiently for her return, when she will gather them up and make them part of the landscape of her life once again. ● Janet Wees, a retired CBE teacher in Calgary, admires doll collections but doesn’t have one of her own. She has written for news&views before, including an article about the making of dolls in the autumn issue. She is the writer of a young adult novel Top: Dolls of fine quality available for published this last April. sale at an antique collection store. Bottom: A ‘Doctor Zhivago’ doll, and others beautifully dressed. news&views SPRING 2019 | 43