Online Encyclopedia

DOLL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 389 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

DOLL  , a

child's plaything in the shape of a human figure or taken as representing one . The word " doll " was not in
See also:
common use in the
See also:
middle ages, " children's babies " and other terms being substituted for it; the commonly accepted view is that it is abbreviated from the name Dorothy (cf . Scottish " Doroty ") . " Idol " has also been connected with it; but the
See also:
accent is held to tell against this . Another derivation is from Norse daul (woman), with which may be compared O.H.G. toccha, M.H.G. docke, a girl, doll, used also in the sense of butterfly, nightmare, &c., thus connecting the doll with magic and superstition . The same connexion is found in
See also:
Asia Minor, South India, among the
See also:
Pueblo peoples and in South Africa;
See also:
philology apart, therefore, the derivation from " idol " has much to recommend it, and some side influence from this word may well have caused the selection of the form " doll." Dolls proper should be distinguished from (a) idols, (b) magical figurines, (c) votive offerings, (d) costume figures . The festival figures of
See also:
Japan, like the bambino of Italy, given to the child only on certain saints' days, hardly come within the category of dolls . Dolls were known in ancient
See also:
Egypt (XVIIIthD ynasty) and Asia Minor; they were common both in
See also:
Greece and Rome;
See also:
Persius mentions that girls vowed them to
See also:
Venus when they got married; dolls found in the catacombs are preserved in the Vatican and the Museum Carpegna . The veupoo-nracrrov (
See also:
Lat. crepundia) of Greek finds of the 6th and later centuries B.C. was a marionette . Dolls were in use among the
See also:
Arabs at the time of Mahomet, and the prophet's nine-
See also:
year-old wife Ayesha is said to have induced him to join her in her
See also:
play with them . Although Mahommedanism prohibits the making of figures in human shape, dolls do not seem to have disappeared from
See also:
Mahommedan countries, though substitutes for them are perhaps more common there than elsewhere . - Dolls are extremely common in Africa .

There seem to be forms

See also:
peculiar to different regions, such as the flat,
See also:
spade-shaped figure on the Gold Coast . Among the Wasaramo the girls carry from°the age of puberty till the birth of their first child an
See also:
object indistinguishable from the ordinary doll; it is called mwana ya kiti (
See also:
stool-child) because it is placed on a stool at home; it probably has a magical significance . The same may be said of the Australian figurines; others, made of
See also:
cane, are undoubtedly children's dolls; excellently moulded
See also:
wax figures are also found . In Asia dolls properly so-called are apparently rare; but there are specimens in museums from the
See also:
Malay peninsula,
See also:
Persia and South India, and in Asia Minor children use cushions, &c., as surrogates . They are found in
See also:
Alaska among the Eskimo . Most Red
See also:
Indian tribes had them; a
See also:
mother who has lost her child carries its dolls and other playthings . Cortes is said to have found Montezuma and his court playing with elaborate dolls; they have been dug up from prehistoric Peruvian graves . In the Gran
See also:
Chaco metacarpal bones of the
See also:
rhea are in use, wrapped in a blanket when they represent male, in a
See also:
petticoat when they are
See also:
female . But little attention has been paid to the psychological side of dolls . Though many boys play with them, dolls are mainly confined to girls; and female dolls predominate in the proportion of twelve to one . The culmination of the doll
See also:
instinct is between the age of eight and nine; but they are not entirely dropped till much later; in fact unmarried and childless
See also:
women sometimes keep it up for years . In children it is said by Hall to be by no means always a manifestation of the maternal instinct; for dolls are not always regarded as children, and the proportion of adults increases with the age of the children .

But the important point is whether the child regarded itself as older or younger than the389 doll . There is, on the other

hand, a tendency to neglect dolls for babies and a
See also:
reverse current of love of dolls which arises out of love of babies .

End of Article: DOLL
[back]
DOLICHOCEPHALIC (long-headed)
[next]
DOLLAR

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.