Dolls
Critics at Large
The Year of the Doll
From Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” to Sofia Coppola’s “Priscilla,” narratives about cloistered women contending with a new political reality have dominated the cultural landscape. Why do these stories hit so hard?
Cultural Comment
The Droll Capitalist Parable of Cabbage Patch Kids
A new documentary, “Billion Dollar Babies,” shows how a product of Appalachian folk art drew the blueprint for all holiday toy crazes to come.
By Jessica Winter
Under Review
Why Are Millennials Still Attached to American Girl?
From the beginning, Pleasant Rowland’s invention wasn’t just a doll but a brand.
By Lizzie Feidelson
Cultural Comment
Decoding Barbie’s Radical Pose
The “Barbie” movie glides over the history of dolls as powerful cultural objects.
By Alexandra Lange
The Weekend Essay
Why Barbie Must Be Punished
Mothers, daughters, and an icon’s existential crisis.
By Leslie Jamison
This Week in Fiction
Cynthia Ozick on Artistic Theft
The author discusses “A French Doll,” her story from the latest issue of the magazine.
By Deborah Treisman
Photo Booth
Greer Lankton’s Lonely Dolls
The artist’s enthralling portraits showcase figures of her own making.
By Johanna Fateman
Afterword
A Master Doll-Maker in the Valley
How Kumiko Serizawa brought a Japanese tradition to California.
By Susan Orlean
Shouts & Murmurs
Dolls That Failed
Why there are no toy dolls modelled on old men, menopausal women, or angry newborns.
By Dahlia Gallin Ramirez
Shouts & Murmurs
The American Girl Pandemic Collection
Despite the fact that these dolls continue to be available exclusively to those willing to go into debt to see a child smile, we hope that this counts as doing our part.
By Jamie Loftus
A Critic at Large
When Barbie Went to War with Bratz
How a legal battle over intellectual property exposed a cultural battle over sex, gender roles, and the workplace.
By Jill Lepore