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         <title>American Girl</title>
         <description><![CDATA[<p>Julia Krieger<br />
Mr. Coleman<br />
JOUR 4990 <br />
November 20, 2008<br />
Sunday Star Tribune article â€“ American Girl doll store<br />
American Girl<br />
My seven-year-old sisterâ€™s favorite doll is depressing. Donâ€™t be fooledâ€”from the outside she looks adorable.  She matches my little sisterâ€™s blonde bob and bright eyes perfectly.  She was recently portrayed in a blockbuster by the sweetest little Hollywood phenom since that kid from the Sixth Sense.  But what she signifies is something far more sinister.<br />
Iâ€™m talking, of course, about the breakout star of the American Girl doll line, Kit Kittredge.  All American Girls represent a certain time period or culture, and Kit is no exception. <br />
Kit has been upheld as the â€œitâ€? Girl of my sisterâ€™s generation, portraying the Depression Era.  How fitting.  <br />
The American Girl line, it seems, has an impeccable knack for timing.  <br />
As political pundits and economic savvyâ€™s nationwide are screaming about the greatest recession since Kitâ€™s day, little girls have been given a new reason to shriekâ€”and itâ€™s not about the debt theyâ€™ll grow up to inherit.  <br />
American Girl recently opened at the Mall of America, causing the youngsters to line up like theyâ€™re unemployedâ€”to buy dolls at a minimum of 90 bucks a pop (without the trappings, of course).<br />
Why, back in my day the dolls only cost $82 apiece.  But that was way back when.  I was in second grade. Bill Clinton ruled the world and was hailed as the â€œfirst black president.â€? <br />
Back then, the company only offered one racial minority personality: Addyâ€”an African-American doll representing the slavery era.  Groundbreaking.  Maverick, even.  <br />
But times, they are a changinâ€™.  Now my little sister is the second grader and we actually have a black president-elect, Barack Obama.  <br />
American Girl surely must have a bevy of new dolls to signify the vast cultural diversity of the United States by now, right? Wrong.<br />
Most of their usual white standbys like Samantha (Victorian era), Felicity (Colonial era), and Molly (the 1950s) now all feature Caucasian sidekicks.  But donâ€™t underestimate those crazy Madison, Wisconsin progressives who make the Girls quite yet. <br />
Now the line offers Josephina, a Mexican girl from the 1820â€™s living on her familyâ€™s â€œrancho,â€? as well as Native American Kaya from the 1700â€™s who is nicknamed â€œMagpieâ€? after an untrustworthy bird.  <br />
And if you count Ivy, the Asian sidekick of Julie, the fifth blonde and tenth Caucasian of the 14-doll line, theyâ€™ve got a pretty accurate representation of the olâ€™ American melting pot.  <br />
It doesnâ€™t help that in the actual pages of the catalogue, Addy seems to be fading out, as racial minority dolls receive less space and make room instead for Kit and Julieâ€”the two new white, blonde American Girls.  <br />
As odd as this skewed portrayal of the American Girl may seem, the company has added a â€œJust Like Youâ€? option, where little girls can make a doll that looks like themâ€”even if theyâ€™re not meant to represent major moments in American history.   <br />
In a time of Change We Can Believe In, itâ€™s difficult to see much change at American Girl, even if the lines for the store do wrap in the way unemployment lines did in Kitâ€™s era. <br />
In the packed store, parents losing their jobs can pay $90 for Depression Era plastic doll to put a smile on their childâ€™s face. <br />
At least in a time of home foreclosure and governmental seizure of family furniture, those parents can take comfort in saying â€œyes, we canâ€? to buying a bed for Samantha at the bargain price of $68.  </p>

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