Where do you live?Yeah, they sell these at the gift shop down the road from me. It's bonkers.
What the fuck?
That sounds horrendous. And it sounds like you've been conditioned to accept it as "jest" after years of bullying. It may not be like that at all, but that's the way it comes across.
Apparently Enid Blyton wasn't a fan of the dolls so she often depicted them as baddies in her books. They've changed the illustrations for reprints so for example that scene has the baddies as goblins.
of course. being english growing up in scotland is hard. especially during my school years - would get kicked, punch, spat on daily just for being english and having a different accent. sometimes had metal bats used against me. this was on top of verbally bullying with english stereotypes
since i left school i take stuff like this in jest, people are just as racist towards me but its never physical. so i can make a joke of it now.
My wife had the same experience. Moved to Scotland when she was 13. Even the Teachers treated her like shit. She has no friends from her time at high school which I think is sort of sad. It got easier as she went into 6th form or whatever it is up there. And then she went to Uni to do a Medical Degree at St. Andrews, despite her Teachers telling her she was too thick, she got an unconditional offer (no she wasn't rich, purely educational merit).
My nephew moved to Ireland when he was about 8, he was never invited to one single birthday party during primary school because he was the 'English kid'. This wasn't the kids, this was the fucking parents. The teachers took great delight in bringing up past atrocities the English caused to the Irish then directing the other pupils at my nephew. The fact my Family have lived in that area for hundreds of years before my Dad moved to the UK looking for work and made the English line didn't seem to matter.


My grandparents used to have some Golliwog dolls.
Probably got them free with the Jam.
We didn't think anything of it and I don't see any harm in them.
The original Golliwog was invented as a dark skinned dwarf thing in a kids book. Toys and shit were made making it super popular...and then racists got hold of it and ruined it for everyone. So it all depends on how you look at it, as the fantasy creature it was invented as or the non-pc person it morphed into.
Same goes for zwarte piet, to outsiders it's clearly racist...but to the Dutch they just don't see it.
It's racist as hell and can sometimes be seen or heard in the UK too. That's what gets me vex when Europeans & Australians like to play the "oh it's just Americans being sensitive, it's not racist here!!" Line.
Really, I think a lot of casual racist Australians don't believe they're racist.
Like, for example. In the car today, my mom (Australian) was talking about one her co-worker's friends being 'racist.' My mom has on multiple occasions said "I'm not racist!" but the thing is, she will occasionally say things like "Mate, don't go to <town> it's full of Lebbos" or "Bloody Asians" while driving. To add to that, she also owns a Golliwog doll, which she admittedly knows it's racist, but keeps it around because it's apparently funny :\
I've lived here all my life, and I've found this to be common in many Australians. I don't think they have bad intentions, it's just that this underlying xenophobia is so engrained in their culture that it's just who they are. It's kind of sad.
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oh man i had this noddy book
the 4 gollywogs stole noddys car and clothes, leaving him naked.
I believe that over the past 30-40 years there have been several large scale immigration waves from Lebanon and Vietnam. At the time these surges in immigration created a lot of tension and that's is where the casual racism towards those groups comes from. The tensions still simmer in the background and occasionally flare up...the Cronulla Race Riots for example.
Also; relatively speaking it's not that long since the "White Australia" policy was ended. There are still a lot of people around from that era who's thoughts about it would have influenced their children and grandchildren.
And, like the USA, you don't have a great history to be all that proud of on race relations being that both countries are largely white cultures that crapped all over the indigenous culture. But the past is merely prologue, we all need to move on from that and be better.Really, I think a lot of casual racist Australians don't believe they're racist.
Like, for example. In the car today, my mom (Australian) was talking about one her co-worker's friends being 'racist.' My mom has on multiple occasions said "I'm not racist!" but the thing is, she will occasionally say things like "Mate, don't go to <town> it's full of Lebbos" or "Bloody Asians" while driving. To add to that, she also owns a Golliwog doll, which she admittedly knows it's racist, but keeps it around because it's apparently funny :\
I've lived here all my life, and I've found this to be common in many Australians. I don't think they have bad intentions, it's just that this underlying xenophobia is so engrained in their culture that it's just who they are. It's kind of sad.
South Park episode.I don't know what this is... explain?
When Chef stands up and demands they address the racist aspect of the flag, he and the rest of the adults discover that the children had not even perceived that there was a racist aspect, seeing the flag as a man being hanged without registering his color, and had instead thought that the issue at hand was capital punishment.
In the end, ethnic diversity is added to the flag: the black man is now being hanged by a group of people of all races, including another black man.
South Park episode.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chef_Goes_Nanners
The original flag looked like this.![]()
So there is a big debate over the flag being racist and some want it changed. I'm referencing the end of the episode.
South Park episode.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chef_Goes_Nanners
The original flag looked like this.![]()
So there is a big debate over the flag being racist and some want it changed. I'm referencing the end of the episode.
Blackface, sadly, isn't as despised in the rest of the world as it is in USA.
They sell similar items in the Bahamas in tourist shops
It's good to be reminded sometimes that Australia is backwards in a lot of ways.
No wonder Tony Abbott is our PM.
It's good to be reminded sometimes that Australia is backwards in a lot of ways.
No wonder Tony Abbott is our PM.
I'm sick of self-loathing Australians. So many whinge and moan about how backwards Australia is. They clearly have never been overseas. We have some of the worlds best education, healthcare, worker rights, posterity, quality of life, a low crime rates, and with most of our cities in the top 10 best in the world, including #1 but oh my god, a golliwog! We're so backwards and awful!
The self-loathing Australians especially came out when Tony Abbott came into power, happily ignoring the fact half of what they whinged about was also what labour did as well.
I'm sick of self-loathing Australians. So many whinge and moan about how backwards Australia is. They clearly have never been overseas. We have some of the worlds best education, healthcare, worker rights, posterity, quality of life, a low crime rates, and with most of our cities in the top 10 best in the world, including #1 but oh my god, a golliwog! We're so backwards and awful!
The self-loathing Australians especially came out when Tony Abbott came into power, happily ignoring the fact half of what they whinged about was also what labour did as well.
Did you learn all of that from A Current Affair or something? Seriously. Australia is no better than any other western country. It probably wouldn't even make the top 3. Nationalism is ignorance.
I've been to the US, and yeah. While I was there, I definitely missed all the decriminalized marijuana, same-sex marriage and uncensored media that was back 'home' in Australia ... Oh wait.
Aston Paki Maui hotelI don't support the availability of Golliwogs over here. I completely understand why there was campaigning for them to disappear in the UK. But it should be noted that the taboo around blackface is a US thing.
Difference countries have difference histories around racial terms and events. Outside of the UK, I doubt people would find the term Paki for Pakistani to be offensive, but it's a racial slur in Britain.
This kind of thing... is a manufactured issue.
It's not that there isn't a racist history associated with that imagery... it's that, it's so low on the totem pole of shit that matters - that bringing this to the forefront as if eliminating this one thing would make everything better - feels like the kind of a thing that some well meaning but unaware kind of person would campaign against and make a big deal out of, until it was gone.
And then we'll have solved racism right?
It's a multi-faceted systems issue, of which things like golliwogs are very minor symptoms.
I don't think anyone is saying anything of the sort in this thread. It's just that some people, understandably, find the dolls offensive and insulting considering the history of how black people have been depicted.
Of course there are worse things, that's not the point. And no one would argue otherwise.
This kind of thing... is a manufactured issue.
It's not that there isn't a racist history associated with that imagery... it's that, it's so low on the totem pole of shit that matters - that bringing this to the forefront as if eliminating this one thing would make everything better - feels like the kind of a thing that some well meaning but unaware kind of person would campaign against and make a big deal out of, until it was gone.
And then we'll have solved racism right?
It's a multi-faceted systems issue, of which things like golliwogs are very minor symptoms.