The Princess Problem by Rebecca Hains

The Marketing of Children’s Toys

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This book offers rich critical perspectives on the marketing of a variety of toys, brands, and product categories. Topics include marketing undertaken by specific children’s toy brands such as American Girl, Barbie, Disney, GoldieBlox, Fisher-Price, and LEGO, and marketing trends characterizing broader toy categories such as on-trend grotesque toys; toy firearms; minimalist toys; toyetics; toys meant to offer diverse representation; STEM toys; and unboxing videos. Toy marketing warrants a sustained scholarly critique because of toys’ cultural significance and their roles in children’s lives, as well as the industry’s economic importance. Discourses surrounding toys—including who certain toys are meant for and what various toys and brands can signify about their owners’ identities—have implications for our understandings of adults’ expectations of children and of broader societal norms into which children are being socialized.

Advance Praise for Cultural Studies of LEGO “This book offers an exceptional insight into the everyday life of the child through their toys. The volume expertly unpacks the phenomena of our current toy culture are and decodes its hidden marketing messages.”

    • Dr. Maya Götz, Head of the International Central Institute for Youth and Educational Television at the Bayerischer Rundfunk

“A diverse collection that critically examines different lines of toys and their role in consumer culture, and how they are intertwined with children’s socialization processes. I am impressed by the diversity of the topics, as well as the diversity of the authors in terms of seniority, gender, institution affiliation and the inclusion of perspectives from outside the US.”

    • Dafna Lemish, Distinguished Professor at Rutgers University and Founding Editor of The Journal of Children and Media

The Marketing of Children’s Toys is a remarkably comprehensive collection of original essays that shine a bright light on the many ways in which the toy industry tactically markets its wares to kids—American, Indonesian, Latinx, and others elsewhere (like Norway). The contributors’ skillful examinations of brands, branders (as well as influencers) range from the macro to the micro, the nursery room to the global marketplace, cultural discourses to digital media play, girlhood to boyhood, toddlers to teenagers, gender stereotyping to grotesque gross-out toys and more. Essays on guns and dolls, among many other topics together employ cultural studies theories and methods of analysis. These skillful interrogations of market categories as well as particular brands, are sure to contribute importantly to scholarships on the commercialization of play, playthings, and children’s cultures, and to the research and teaching of Children’s Studies, Girls’ Studies, Media Studies, and Dolls’ Studies scholars.”

    • Miriam Forman-Brunell, Emerita Professor of History, Women’s & Gender Studies, University of Missouri-Kansas City, author of Made to Play House: Dolls and the Commercialization of American Girlhood, 1830-1930 and Deconstructing Dolls: Girlhoods and the Meanings of Play

Table of Contents: The Marketing of Children’s Toys
A preview of each chapter is available on Palgrave’s web site

Chapter 1       
Critiquing Children’s Consumer Culture: An Introduction to “The Marketing of Children’s Toys”
Rebecca C. Hains & Nancy Jennings

Chapter 2       
Playing with Fire: Marketing Youth Toy and Working Firearms as Social Problem and Social Panacea
Jody Lyneé Madeira

Chapter 3       
Reclaiming the Living Room: The Play Value of Grotesque Toys
Tyler Brunette

Chapter 4       
Playing with Minimalism: How Parents Are Sold on High-End Toys and Childhood Simplicity
Spring-Serenity Duvall

Chapter 5       
Imported Toys in Indonesia: Parental Consumer Literacy, Purchasing Decisions, and Globalization
Rani Chandra Oktaviani & Fadlin Nur Ichwan

Chapter 6       
Unwrapping Toy TV: Ryan’s World and the Toy Review Genre’s Impact on Children’s Culture
Kyra Hunting

Chapter 7       
Toys That Train the Tots: Fisher-Price’s Smart Toys in the Digital Age
Nancy A. Jennings & Judi Puritz Cook

Chapter 8       
Commodifying Culture: Mattel’s and Disney’s Marketing Approaches to “Latinx” Toys and Media
Emily R. Aguiló-Pérez

Chapter 9       
A Toy for Thoughtful Parents: The Rhetorical Building Blocks of LEGO’s Reputation
Lauren DeLaCruz

Chapter  10    
“Smart Is the New Cool”: Project MC2 and the Marketing of STEM Lifestyles to Tween Girl
Avi Santo

Chapter 11     
Hacking Girl Power: GoldieBlox Play Sets and Material Rhetoric
Margeaux B. Lippman

Chapter 12     
Toy Discourses and Gendered Roles in “The Most Gender Equal Country in the World”: A Critical Cultural Analysis of Norwegian Toy Catalogues from 2011 to 2018
Trine Kvidal-Røvik

Chapter 13     
Unpacking Logan: The Construction of Masculinity in the American Girl Boy Doll
Emilie Zaslow & Jaclyn Griffith

Chapter 14     
The Politics of Barbie’s Curvy New Body: Marketing Mattel’s Fashionistas Line
Rebecca C. Hains