Stone Soup an Essay Written by Barbara Kingsolver

1738 Words4 Pages

Madurodam has been the smallest city in the Netherlands since its inception in 1952. Its tributaries and canals measuring no more than a finger’s width. Its ornately crafted Dutch gabled houses would make amiable summer residences for rodents. Its immaculate portrayal of railway lines would have any train-spotter paralyzed with awe. This war-monument-turned-amusement-park steals the imagination of children and adults alike. There is a certain human tendency to associate affection with objects of a reduced size. Maybe it is this affection that serves as the reason almost all of the toys we make for children, as Roland Barthes puts it, “are essentially a microcosm of the adult world [...] reduced copies of human objects,” (“Toys” 689). One might argue that toys of this kind allow for the child to more quickly adjust to the conventions of the world they are about to be members of, but does such ritual conformity repress creative freedom, a birth right of every child? Delving into Barthes’s text in the hospital-like, fluorescent annex of Bobst, I pondered the causalities of this question. An excerpt from “Mythologies”, “Toys” follows Barthes’s social commentary on the French toy industry during the 1970’s. In his view, “French toys always mean something, and this something is always entirely socialized,”(89). These toys that exist as a representation are always given meanings which configure the child to social protocols. We can speculate from toys of different periods, each representative of a different part of the world, and draw parallels concerning their functions: “There exist, for instance, dolls which urinate; they have an esophagus, one gives them a bottle, they wet their nap[-]pies,”(89). Barthes believes that “[they] ... ... middle of paper ... ... constructs we built for ourselves; we have become the children and we make toys for ourselves that condition in a vicious cycle of pathetic stagnation. Find your Campbell Soup Cans, your reclusive pond, your place in a family that stands out... and you will have found yourself. Works Cited Barthes, Roland. “Toys.” Occasions for Writing: Evidence, Idea, Essay. Ed. Robert DiYanni and Pat C. Hoy II. Boston: Thomson, 2008. 689-90. Print. Kingsolver, Barbara. “Stone Soup” Occasions for Writing: Evidence, Idea, Essay. Ed. Robert DiYanni and Pat C. Hoy II. Boston: Thomson, 2008. 274-78. Print. Thoreau, Henry David. “Why I Went to the Woods.” Occasions for Writing: Evidence, Idea, Essay. Ed. Robert DiYanni and Pat C. Hoy II. Boston: Thomson, 2008. 577-581. Print. Warhol, Andy. “Campbell Soup Cans”. 1962. Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). New York, NY.

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