Zora Neale Hurston is one of America’s
most beloved literary figures, an influential writer, anthropologist,
and giant of the Harlem Renaissance; her 1937 novel Their Eyes Were Watching God is
still ubiquitous more than 80 years later. But you know all that—so
today, on Hurston’s birthday, here’s something you might not have known
about her: that she had a hand in the creation of the Sara Lee doll, one
of the first “quality” or “realistic”—that is, well-made, non-racist
and non-stereotyped—African American baby dolls produced in the United
States.
According to Gordon Patterson’s 1994 article “Color Matters: the Creation of the Sara Lee Doll” (originally published in The Florida Historical Quarterly)
it all began in December 1948, when a white woman named Sara Lee Creech
noticed two black children playing with white dolls in a car outside of
a post office in Belle Glade, Florida, where she lived. Creech was
already involved in social justice—she had been active in women’s
movements since the mid 1930s and in the spring of 1948 had helped form
an Interracial Council in Belle Glade—and she realized that it was wrong
that these black children did not have access to dolls that looked like
them. She decided that she would create such a doll, one that “would
represent the beauty and diversity of black children.” ... [mehr] https://lithub.com/how-zora-neale-hurston-helped-create-the-first-realistic-black-baby-doll/
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