Tome 1: 93 p.
Tome 2: 13 p. + 107 figures
This publication can be consult on :
http://www.hh.se/dep/ncflweb/Publications.html
NCFL - Nordic Center for Research on Toys and Educational Media
University of Halmstad, Box 823, 301 18 Halmstad, Sweden
© Jean-Pierre Rossie
ISBN 91-89400-30-5
© Jean-Pierre Rossie
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© Jean-Pierre Rossie
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A SYNTHESIS
When speaking of toys, and the games in which they
are used, in North Africa and the Sahara an enormous territory as
well as a complex socio-cultural area this lies in the diversity of
physical, economic, social and cultural environments are evoked. So
one should beware of hurried generalizations. One reason for
creating a big difference between a small Berber-speaking
semi-nomadic Saharan settlement and an Arabic-speaking large
Moroccan town with an old urban tradition. Another reason to be
suspicious of general statements is found in the almost total lack
of as well previous as contemporary research on play, games and toys
in this region.
The information gathered here speaks of children
between three and thirteen years, for boys possibly a somewhat older
age, living in non-industrial rural communities or in popular
quarters of the cities. So one will look in vain for information on
infants and young toddlers.
Four sources of information lay at the basis of my
research:
- the collection of Saharan and North African toys
of the Département d’Afrique Blanche et du Proche Orient of the
Musée de l’Homme in Paris;
- the ethnographic, linguistic and other
bibliography of the geographic area concerned;
- my research on the games and toys of the Ghrib
children from the Tunisian Sahara, between 1975 and 1977;
- my since 1992 ongoing research in Morocco.
Chapter 2, ‘Toy design: reflexions of an
anthropologist’, mentions some reflexions that relate to the local
Saharan and North African attitude towards traditional and imported
dolls, such as Barbie and Brownie the gnome. In this chapter I also
give examples of toy design with natural and waste materials and I
try to relate the topic of toy design and safety to the toys made by
the children themselves. Chapter 3, ‘Toys, sociocultural
reproduction and continuity’, deals with the relationships between
toys, the sociocultural reproduction and the continuity of toy
design, play, attitudes, behaviors and values in successive
generations. Chapter 4, ‘Toys and creativity’ looks at the
evolvement of individual and collective creativity in toy making and
play activities. Chapter 5, ‘Dolls, symbols and communication’,
analyses some aspects relating to the topics of symbols and
communication through toys. Chapter 6, ‘Girls’ dolls: a social
semiotic approach’, describes a first attempt to use this approach
on the dolls of North African and Saharan girls. Chapter 7, ‘Toys
and gender’, looks at differences and similarities between boys and
girls in making toys and playing with them. Chapter 8, ‘Toys and
generations’, reviews the adult-child and child-child ludic
relationships. Chapter 9, ‘Toys and change’, tries to define the
evolution of dolls and dolls’ houses and of toys representing means
of transport and technology. Finally, Chapter 10, ‘Conclusion’,
links the toy making and play activities of North African and
Saharan children to the commercialization of toys and the general
debate on toys and play. In an Appendix, the reader will find a
scheme for a detailed description of play activities, games and toys
that can serve as a guide in describing these ludic activities.
In the actual Western context Barbie is an
idealized model for young girls as well as boys of all classes of
how a young woman should look like, what she should strive after and
how she should behave. Except among the upper class, most men and
women of the present day Saharan and North African communities have
a totally different viewpoint on the same Barbie. The ideal female
model there is a decently dressed well fed, even corpulent, young
woman as symbolized in the female dolls made by the girls of these
regions. The Barbie-like type is in real life associated with what
is called in Morocco ‘une squelette vivante’, a ‘living skeleton’.
Still today, a woman with such a figure is viewed as a very lean
woman whose appearance is to be attributed to one of the following
pitiful conditions: poorness, sickness, having problems, if not a
combination of them. So it is not surprising that some women take
pills to thicken, just as they do it in the West to grow lean.
Without trying to give an exhaustive list of the
natural material taken from the local environment and used to make
toys, these items can be grouped as follows:
- material of mineral origin: sand, clay, paint,
stones, pebbles...,
- material of vegetal origin: cactus, flowers, palm
or read leaves, reed, sticks and branches, bark of cork-oak, sap,
glue, paint, ear of maize, nuts, dates, courgettes, patatoes...,
- material of animal origin: bones, horns, hair,
skin, intestines, dung...,
- material of human origin: hair, parts of the body
or the whole body.
© Jean-Pierre Rossie
|
© Jean-Pierre Rossie
|
Children are masters in the reutilization of waste
material they find in their human environment. So it is obvious that
they also use this material for elaborating toys. An incomplete list
contains the following items:
- earthenware material: pieces of pottery, pearls,
buttons...,
- glass material: pieces of glass utensils,
bottles, pearls...,
- wooden material: pieces of timber wood,
spoons...,
- fibrous material: cotton, woolen or synthetic
threads and rags, pieces of carpets...,
- metallic material: pieces of iron, aluminum,
copper and tin, wires, tins, cans, nails, needles, safety pins,
parts of bicycles and cars...,
- paper material: paper, pasteboard, cardboard...,
- plastic and rubber material: tubes, tires, pipes,
flasks, cans, bottles, bottle stoppers, plastic toys or parts of
it...,
- other material: pencils, ball-points, ink, paint,
glue, candle, make up products...
As different materials are often used in
combination, the same toy often exemplifies the use of natural
material of different origin as well as the use of different kinds
of waste material. Leaves, especially palm and reed leaves, serve to
create different kinds of toys, such as whistles, little windmills,
animals, cars. But also vegetables, like courgettes and patatoes,
can be used to create toys. Sound-making toys, such as whistles,
flutes or drums, are made as well with natural as with waste
material.
Playing household offers a good example of the use
of different types of waste material combined with some natural
material. In small houses, delimited by stones or little walls of
sand, North African and Saharan girls use pieces of pottery and
glass utensils; metallic caps, tins and cans; plastic ropes, flasks,
cans, plates and bottle stoppers; pieces of paper, cardboard and
wood; rags of all kinds and a lot more waste material; but they also
use water, clay, flowers and herbs, little branches and reed.
The same object can be easily transformed into
several toys within a very short time as I could observe in November
1997 when a Moroccan boy of about six years first walked around with
a half of a plastic can as his toy-hat, then attached it to a rope
and used it as a football before changing it into a drum to
accompany his singing, all this in less than five minutes.
The above mentioned examples of toys made by the
children with natural and waste material offer just a glimpse of
what these children experience and learn about materials, techniques
and structures. This creation of toys and the playing with them also
offers the children the possibility to develop all their senses.
Moreover, It is not the finished toy itself that is important but,
on the one hand, the process of searching the material and of
creating the toy and, on the other hand, the play activities in
which they are used.
The question of safety and unsafeness in relation
to the toys made by Saharan and North African children is a
completely unstudied one and surely very problematic as a discussion
on these topics will reveal opposing viewpoints: the ones stressing
the creativity and developmental advantages of self-made toys, the
others underlining the inherent danger of doing so.
Speaking of non-industrialized communities, it
certainly is easier to give instances of the relationships between
toys and the continuity of attitudes, behaviors and values in
successive generations than to document on the relationships between
the making of toys and the development of creativity.
A remarkable African example of continuity in toy
design is offered by the spatial and temporal distribution of
toy-animals in clay, especially of a special type of toy-animal
modeled with the two front legs assembled in one leg. I have found
four groups of three-legged toy-animals in clay, three located along
the Niger river in Mali and one from the Mauritanian Sahara: the
archeological finds at Jenné-Jeno (100 B.C. - A.D. 1400), the
archeological finds in 1904 from the Rhergo area (no date), the
toy-animals of the Tuareg children from Tombouctou and Goundam
(1950s) and the toy-animals from Oualata (1930s-1950s).
Although probably few people will have expected to
find such a two thousand year old, and probably much older, toy
tradition in the meridional part of the Sahara, this continuity in
toy design and in the material used to create the toy-animals is not
so surprising if one bears in mind the striking similarity between
some ancient Chinese, Egyptian, Greek or Indian toys and some modern
toys such as dolls, toy-animals, knucklebones, marbles, spinning
tops, spinning wheels, kites, swings, rattles.
In the more or less traditional milieus of North
Africa and the Sahara, the dolls and doll play as well as the other
toys and play activities reflect the social and cultural realities
of the community in which the children grow up. They are directly
related to the child-rearing methods and to the values upheld in the
child’s family and local community.
In his doll play the child of these regions very
often anticipates the life it will have as an adult, at least in
those communities where the lifestyle only changed slowly from one
generation to the next, a stability that you can find nowhere in the
Sahara or in North Africa since three or four decades. However, what
is at stake in the doll play of North African and Saharan children
is a personal interpretation of the adult world not just a simple
and clear imitation of it. A lot of play activities and toys help
children to integrate themselves in the primary social groups in
which they grow up, to adapt to the roles offered to them and to
interiorate the norms and values prevailing in these groups.
Nevertheless, one should not see non-industrial communities, even
rural ones, as monolithic groups. In the same neighborhood and
within the same socio-economic class, you can find families that are
more restrictive regarding the play activities and the toy making of
their children than other families. In some families playing is seen
as a waste of time, especially for girls, whereas other parents
leave their children more free to play.
In their interpretation of the adult world these
children not only show fidelity to the traditional canons but also
develop their creativity. A somewhat unusual creative action was
surely undertaken in 1975 by a few Ghrib boys of the Tunisian Sahara
who designed facial features on their sisters’ dolls that
traditionally did not have facial features, a custom still honored
by the girls at that moment although some of these girls clumsily
tried to imitate their brothers. Later on, in 1991, Ghrib girls of
the following generation made a creative use of a waste product of
the consumptive society, a plastic flask, to give a new head to
their dolls at the same time designing well elaborated facial
features on it. A truly individual creativity comes to the
foreground in the case of a girl of a poor quarter of Marrakech in
Morocco who made out of an undressed plastic doll, made in China, a
beautiful bride doll of Marrakech.
I found another fine example of the creative use of
natural and waste material skillfully combined to create a
remarkable toy figuring an inaccessible item of agricultural
progress, namely a tractor in a really small village in the Moroccan
High Atlas. This ingenious toy design has been realized in not more
than ten minutes by a thirteen-year-old boy with nothing else than
some fresh pieces of cactus, parts of a little branch and of reed,
on the one hand, and pieces of rubber, part of a rubber pipe and
plastic bottle stoppers, on the other hand.
Because of the primordial importance of the North
African and Saharan children’s playgroups, I want to stress the
hypothesis that the creativity in making toys and playing with them
could more often be expressed, and if so should be investigated, in
the children’s interactions within their playgroups rather than in
the case of isolated players.
Although toys have several aspects that are
universal, each sociocultural system has developed some particular
toy design, for example for toys representing human beings. These
toys refer to specific symbols and are used for communicating
specific messages.
The face of a doll has very important
significations. Among all the North African and Saharan male dolls I
have seen or read about, not one has a face on which the eyes, nose,
mouth or ears are represented. These male dolls completely lack
facial features, even those modeled in clay. As the male dolls from
all over the area, the female dolls of the children of the Saharan
nomads have a symbolic face. Among the Tuareg, the Ghrib and the
Moors these dolls traditionally had no facial features. The same
cannot be said of the sedentary Saharan populations as among them
the facial features of the dolls are sometimes indicated. Between a
total lack of facial features and their realistic representation,
one finds also a more fancy elaboration of these features.
As will become clear in the section on the
‘Evolution of Dolls and Dolls’ Houses’, it seems that the
modernization of the North African and Saharan societies pushes the
children away from a symbolic representation of the facial features
towards a more realistic one. An evolution especially stimulated, as
far as the children are concerned, by schooling and the
mass-media.
Symbolic and realistic images of masculinity and
femininity are also present in North African and Saharan dolls.
Among the two most important nomadic peoples of the Sahara, the
Tuareg and the Moors, the most striking difference between a male
and a female doll is a standing versus a sitting posture. These
female dolls also have very developed buttocks, because this is a
sign of beauty and wealth. So the doll becomes a means to inculcate
on the mind of the child the ideal of female beauty, just as the
Barbie doll does for the American and European child.
As a summarizing statement on this point of
symbolic and realistic images of masculinity and femininity in North
African and Saharan dolls, one could say that they show at the same
time a realistic copy of an adult and a symbolic representation of
an idealized sociocultural status. Both images are elaborated in a
straight figurative way, through posture, hairdo, clothing,
ornamentation, and rarely physical characteristics such as the
representation of the buttocks or the breasts on the female
dolls.
With an exception for Morocco, I have noticed the
existence of male dolls only among the children of populations
living in the Sahara, especially the nomads and semi-nomads. Those
male dolls are made by girls and sometimes by boys, mostly Tuareg
boys. They represent dromedarists, horsemen, herdsmen, warriors,
notable men or bridegrooms. Child dolls seem to be very rare in the
whole area and if they do exist they closely resemble the adult male
or female dolls. Nevertheless, the Chaouia mother doll carrying her
baby doll on her back, made by the Berber girls of the AurËs region
in north east Algeria, is there to show the relativity of every
absolute statement.
Doll play is not limited to visual communication
through dolls, as other forms of non-verbal communication, through
gestures and dances, have their place in all this. The verbal
communication is also present through dialogues and songs.
As within each community the children play with the
same kind of dolls, their similitude facilitates the elaboration and
communication of shared signification. This elaboration and
communication of shared signification being strengthened by the fact
that most of the children make themselves their dolls. Thus the
dolls and the doll play can be viewed as an efficient communicative
tool for the keeping up of the sociocultural system.
Through dolls and doll play a lot of symbols,
signification, aesthetic, social and moral values are transmitted
from one generation to the other and interiorized by the children in
a ludic way. In this context, the ludic inter generational
interaction between children and adults on the one hand and between
older and younger children on the other hand is of the uttermost
importance. However, one can ascertain that in the North African and
Saharan doll play, it normally being a collective activity not an
individual one, the interaction among peers is largely predominant.
In their collective doll play these children from the same family or
neighborhood, enact their interpretation of the adult world, of
female and sometimes male activities, of festivities.
When looking more closely to the topic of how
specific material has been chosen to represent specific features of
dolls, I have found some interesting examples, such as reed leaves
to give a traditional hairdos, hemp to create long hair locks, the
beard of an ear of maize to give long hair. However, this
intentional use of materials and objects is not limited to making
dolls. It is also important in the creation of other toys, for
example when the jaw-bone of a goat or a sheep is used to represent
a dromedary or when children use all kinds of round, cylindrical and
oval objects to make wheels for their toy-carts, bicycles, motors,
cars, trucks and tractors.
Although it is sometimes possible to relate the
choice of a particular material or object to a specific
representational meaning, this will be much more difficult if not
impossible in other cases. It certainly would be interesting to ask
children why they prefer to use one kind of material instead of
other kinds, yet, they probably quite often will find this a
‘stupid’ or ‘nonsense’ question and their answer could just be ‘it
was always like that’, ‘everybody does it this way’, ‘that is the
way we learned to do it’ or ‘that is what we can use’.
Next to the material used by children to make their
toys, the used technology is also important. The North African and
Saharan children are restricted to what is called "the technologies
of the hand". Yet, the used handtools are more often than not
objects found by the children themselves, not tools of adults.
One of the technological aspects these children are
confronted with, is the aspect of movement, movement of the toy
itself or movement of parts of the toy. Although the North African
and Saharan dolls, I know of, have no movable parts, the fact that
they are not articulated should not be attributed to a lack of
technical know-how as other toys have movable parts, e.g.
toy-windmills, toy-ploughs, toy-cars.
Gender differentiation played and still plays a
very important role in the socialization of North African and
Saharan children and therefore also in the sphere of toys and play.
Toys made by girls seem largely to be inspired by the intimate
sphere of family life, especially making dolls, small houses, little
tents, toy-utensils. Boys, on the contrary, although they also may
make here or there these toys seem to prefer to make toys inspired
by the techniques or necessary for enacting economic activities. It
is especially in their imitative games, and in the making of the
toys used in them, that the girls or the boys of these regions
represent the everyday life of either their female or male
relatives.
As girls are part of the female world they remain
more bounded to tradition than boys and this sociocultural reality
is reflected in the making of toys. It probably explains why most
toy making and most play activities related to technological and
sociocultural change are found among boys. The making of toys
related to the animal world, an animal world that still plays a very
important role in rural North Africa and in the Sahara, is
predominantly the work of boys. With these toy-animals -
representing dromedaries, horses, mules, goats, sheep, cattle, dogs
and also some wild animals - the boys play at watering and feeding
their herd, at mounting a caravan, engaging in a race, organizing a
hunting, cattle-stealing or cattle-trading expedition, all
activities related to economic activities and the male dominated
outside world.
Following the same line of gender division between
the inner female world and the outside male world common in the
region, the self-made toys and related play activities that refer to
domestic life - small houses, toy-utensils, toy-handmills, toy-looms
- are more peculiar to the girls, whereas, the self-made toys and
related play activities that refer to the techniques, toy-vehicles,
toy-weapons, toy-communication items, are more peculiar to the
boys.
From a young age, lets say at the age of about five
years, children’s play groups become separated between girls’ groups
and boys’ groups, whereby girls’ play groups, much more than boys’
play groups, possibly have to care for one or more little girls and
boys. As play groups of girls and play groups of boys are strongly
separated, the role of the peer group with its same-sex playmates is
overwhelmingly important in making and playing with sex-appropriate
toys.
The freedom of movement of the somewhat older girls
and boys is strikingly different. Normally, one finds the girls’
play groups nearby their homes. Boys’ play groups can be found
further away, the distance broadening as the boys become older as in
the case of these Moroccan boys playing in the sea at two hours
walking from their village. Another striking difference between boys
and girls, already at the age of six years but becoming more
important at a more advanced age, is the time they are left free to
play as girls must help more often their mother and female relatives
than boys their father and male relatives.
As the data on gender differences in the toy making
and playing of North African and Saharan children are scarce, the
above made statements should only be seen as hypothetical and not as
established facts. So, much more specific research will be needed to
verify them. Moreover, the distinction between girls and boys in the
sphere of making toys and playing with them should not be viewed as
a rigid one as I have found already some cases in which a girl or a
boy made or played with a typical toy of the other sex.
Playing with others from ones own generation and
from older and younger generations reveals to be of the uttermost
importance in the growing up and socialization of children, and this
certainly remains true for North African and Saharan children. But
the information gained from the bibliography of these regions does
not give much concrete data on generation differences in ludic
activities nor on playful relations between adults and children. So,
I have to turn to my research on the Ghrib children of the Tunisian
Sahara to be able to give some detailed data on the relationship
between adults and children through play and toy making.
Among the Ghrib, as elsewhere in North Africa and
the Sahara and probably all over the world, it is the mother,
grandmother or older sister who most of the time soothes and amuses
the little girls and boys of the family. Nevertheless, I have more
than once observed that a father or an uncle, an adult brother or
cousin played just for fun with a toddler, as well a girl as a boy.
However, if the child gives trouble or starts crying, it is easily
handed over to its mother or older sister. When a female family
member plays with a little child it can also be just for fun but
more often it serves the purpose of pacifying, distracting,
occupying or entertaining the baby or toddler. The close
relationship between female family members and little children too
easily leads to the conclusion that in more or less traditional
communities fathers, grandfathers, older brothers and uncles do not
interact with young children. However, one should be careful with
such hasty conclusions, often based on superficial or hurried
observations.
The generally accepted viewpoint, accepted as well
by local people as by foreign observers, that the adults of these
regions are quite indifferent to, or, probably more correct,
unpreoccupied by children’s play remains as far as I know without an
adequate explanation. However, some elements for such an explanation
can be brought forward. As toy making and play activities are viewed
as an integral part of childhood, as this childhood is not defined
as a separate sociocultural entity and as there is a clear
distinction between the status of being a child and the status of
being an adult, these child(ish) ludic activities should not only be
dropped when entering adulthood but adults should not participate in
children’s play neither. Moreover, as children in these communities
most of the time are very well socialized and do respect the local
norms and values even in their play, there seems to be little
necessity for adult interference. Still, adult interference and
control of children’s play is certainly more important when it
concerns girls who have to remain in the vicinity of the house,
whereas boys enjoy a lot more freedom.
In relation to the adult-child relationship through
a gift of a toy, so common in other societies more directed towards
consumption, it seems that such a gift was, and often still is,
exceptional in the Saharan and North African societies as the
children in most cases make their toys themselves.
These toys are created by children to communicate
with children and, notwithstanding some exceptions, they are not
created in isolation but most often within a play group. If in the
sphere of play activities, games and toys the role of adults is less
visible in the North African and Saharan context, the role of the
children’s play group, of the older siblings and play-mates and of
the peers is overwhelmingly important.
To see a North African or Saharan child playing
alone is something that happens only now and then. Children’s play
activities in these regions are especially collective and outdoor
activities. Playgroups are hereby the basic social organizations.
They consist of only girls or only boys, seldom of boys and girls
together. When girls and boys form a playgroup together they are
toddlers or somewhat older children, possibly under the direction of
an older girl, maybe now and then an older boy. The factors for
choosing play-mates to form a playgroup are primordially based on
ties of kinship or neighborhood. This certainly strengthens the
cohesion of the playgroups and the bonds between the children, even
more than in the case of play groups composed of schoolmates, a
common factor for organizing play groups in post-industrial
societies.
In the chapter 'Toys and Change' an analysis of the
relationship between toys and the evolution of North African and
Saharan societies is proposed. My first example of the evolution of
female dolls comes from the Ghrib of the Tunisian Sahara. This Ghrib
community, which changed from a nomadic way of life before 1960 to a
semi-nomadic lifestyle in the seventies, has nowadays completely
settled down.
The evolution of the girls’ female dolls took place
in a period of fifteen years, between 1975 and 1990. The traditional
dolls represent a bride and have a stereotype frame of two crossed
sticks. They are individualized by their clothes made of all kinds
of rags. The jewels they wear are a replication of those a girl
receives from her future husband but they are made out of iron wire,
pieces of tin cans and aluminum fragments. Finally, the dolls wear
two plaits of goat-hair which hang before the ears, just as married
women do, and one or more pieces of clothes serve as kerchief.
In the oasis of El Faouar where most of the Ghrib
have settled, some brothers going to the primary school designed in
1975 facial features on the dolls their illiterate sisters had made
and wanted to give me. Traditionally, these dolls do not have such
features and the Ghrib girls respected this norm. Nevertheless, the
girls did not oppose their brothers’ spontaneous action and some
girls even tried to do the same.
Some fifteen years later, in 1991, the facial
features now designed by the school going girls themselves are well
elaborated. At that moment, another innovation in the making of
female dolls did also come up. Therefore the Ghrib girls have made
use of one of the waste products of the consumptive society, a
consumptive society that has succeeded in integrating the Ghrib
community to an increasing extent. This waste product is an empty
plastic flask that serves as the doll’s head by putting it over a
vertical stick. An elaborated face has been designed on the
flask.
Not only in Marrakech, but also in other Moroccan
towns the locally made doll has been replaced by imported plastic
dolls. In Moroccan villages one finds today as well the self-made
doll as the imported plastic doll, a plastic doll sometimes adapted
to local ways by giving it a self-made dress. But in some other,
even really small, Moroccan villages the self-made doll has
disappeared.
Another evolution is directly related to the
development of tourism. Today in the east of Morocco, where tourists
come to admire the sand dunes of Merzouga, some young girls make
their traditional dolls with a frame of reed not so much any longer
to play with them, although they still use them for their doll play,
but for selling them to these tourists. This way these dolls change
from children’s toys to touristic objects. Another example of the
influence of tourism on children’s toys is already a lot older and
related to the beautiful dolls’ houses of the girls of the small
town of Oualata in the Mauritanian Sahara.
The evolution of North African and Saharan dolls
refers to the ludic activities of girls as boys only rarely make
dolls. But the evolution of toys representing means of transport and
technology on the contrary refers to the sphere of ludic activities
of the boys.
In the 1970s when the Ghrib lived a more or less
seminomadic life, their boys liked to play with and to make a
sometimes mounted toy-dromedary. But for a toddler just a piece of
wood would do to represent the symbiosis that existed over centuries
between the Ghrib and their dromedaries of which they were renowned
breeders.
In the second half of the 1970s it was obvious that
different toys and games of the Ghrib boys were influenced by the
evolution of their community from nomadism to sedentariness, such as
playing at being a village merchant or at irrigating a miniature
oasis garden. This evolution however was very clear in the case of
toys representing means of transport, for example in the making of
miniature carts with a toy-mule as draught-animal typical for a
sedentarized way of life. There were also some self-made toys,
called bicycles, with which their owners ran over the sand dunes.
However, more popular were the toy-cars as in the case of the
Peugeot collective taxi made with wet sand. And young boys
identified so much with this prestigious item of modernity that they
themselves became a living car.
Although locally made or imported plastic
toy-animals, often of bad quality, have invaded North Africa decades
ago, children still make traditional toy-animals here and there. In
the more important city shops plastic animals for children to ride
on can be bought but they are also imported from Europe as a present
by migrants visiting their family.
As among the Ghrib, cars and trucks fascinate
Moroccan boys, as well those of the cities as those of remote areas.
A boy from a village near Kenitra made an elaborated truck using
thrown away oil filters as wheels. In another Moroccan village I
witnessed how toys can change in response to new experiences. Up to
then, the boys made a truck with an oil can, four wheels cut out of
a tire, a steering wheel of wire and so on. However, as they
observed during the reconstruction of the irrigation system how a
concrete mixer was filled with a lifting tray attached to the mixer,
they invented a way to attach a lifting tray to their toy-truck
using a small tin can tray and a long wire attached to the steering
wheel. When pulling the wire the sand or stones accumulated in the
tray are thrown into the truck.
A final example of the influence of the
modernization of North African and Saharan societies on toys and
games refers to the use of telephones. In 1977, when no Ghrib family
living in the oasis of El Faouar in the north-western Tunisian
Sahara had a telephone, boys created their own telephone line by
digging and covering a small trench in the sand, this way
anticipating the role telephone communications would play in their
own adult life. The same situation occurred at the end of the 1970s
in a small Moroccan village where boys and girls had their own
telephone lines using a long wire to which at both ends a little
plastic pot was fixed. But even nowadays when the use of telephones
has become much more frequent, Moroccan children do not only play
with plastic telephones. Sometimes they still make their telephone
themselves as in the case of a five year old boy playing with
clay.
Changes in the toys and games of Northern African
and Saharan children do not mainly come from foreign imports, as in
the case of Asian or European toys. On the contrary, changes occur
most of the time by two ways: by using local material and techniques
to create toys referring to new items, and by using new material and
techniques to produce toys referring to local themes.
Toys made by the children themselves are often very
short living play objects. However, at the same time they are remade
again and again, this way offering possibilities for change through
internal and external influences:
- change, or maybe more correct progress, due to
ameliorated skills because of exercise and the child’s own
development, whereby the toy becomes better adapted to the ludic
functions it should have according to the child;
- change because of environmental influences such
as new material, learning from others how to do, shifts in interest
promoted by social and economic change, influences by Western media
and global toy marketing.
Finally, I feel inclined to say that in the sphere
of ludic activities, where ancient and new types of toys and games
mix daily, one should speak of subtle changes that reflect and
sometimes foreshadow technological, economic, social and cultural
evolution.
The commercialization of toys, making the more
expensive industrially manufactured toys affordable only for middle
class and high class families, creates a new distinction between
Saharan and North African children, a distinction that did not exist
when the toys where self-made. As the evolution towards a
consumptive society is slowly but surely moving on in these regions,
those children whose parents cannot afford to buy good quality toys
not only will feel frustrated but at the same time they become less
motivated to make themselves the ‘devaluated’ toys they usually play
with. This situation results more than once in buying cheap toys of
rather bad quality or even toys that are dangerous as safety control
for toys are lacking in the region. This commercialization of toys
also stimulates to look at toys as a gift from adults to children,
an attitude that until recently was as good as non-existent
there.
In general, one can claim that the self-made toys
are quite quickly declining in Saharan and North African cities, a
few exceptions left aside, such as toy-cars or toy-weapons made by
boys. Moreover, the traditional self-made doll seems as good as
forgotten in these cities, at least I have not found one made
recently by a city girl in Morocco. Nevertheless, a lot of children,
largely but not exclusively in rural areas, still have much fun in
creating their own toys. The recent examples from Morocco, shown in
this study, are sufficient proof for this.
JEAN-PIERRE ROSSIE biography