American Girls Collection: Difference between revisions

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{{work}}
{{quote| ''"Follow your Inner Star!"''}}
 
The American Girls Collection -- generally referred to as "American Girl" -- is a collection of dolls and books that show history in various time periods ranging from Late Native America to [[The Seventies]] -- all through the eyes of the average nine-year-old girl.
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'''The main Historical Characters currently consist of:'''
* Kaya'aton'my (1764): Nez Perce Native American in the Pacific Northwest, pre-European settlement. Tries to get rid of her [[Embarrassing Nickname]] 'Magpie' by proving to her tribe she isn't like the selfish bird. She has a [[Cool Horse]].
* Felicity Merriman (1774): Strangely, ''not'' part of the original three, yet pulled from the lineup in 2011; she was later re-released in 2017 as part of the BeForever reboot. [[Fiery Redhead]], daughter of a merchant family in Virginia as [[The American Revolution]] approaches. Her series has a lot of plots focusing on the conflict of independence vs. loyalty to tradition. She also has a [[Cool Horse]].
* Josefina Montoya (1824): [[Shrinking Violet]], daughter of a rancher in Mexican-controlled Southwest. Her [[Missing Mom|mother died]] just before her series starts, leaving her, her three sisters, and their grieving father somewhat lost, until her aunt Dolores moves in and helps everyone discover their [[Hidden Depths]]. [[My Name Is Inigo Montoya|No relation.]]
* Cécile Rey and Marie-Grace Gardner (1853): Two very different girls (a French-speaking African American and an English-speaking Caucasian American, respectively) growing up and becoming friends during the boom of 19th century New Orleans, Louisiana. The girls' stories involve embracing one another despite differences and cultural barriers, and giving aid to those in distress, most notably during [[The Plague|the breakout of yellow fever]] which struck New Orleans in 1853. The first of the main historical characters to be marketed as a duo (although each have their books, and their dolls can be purchased separately), and the newest to be released as of summer 2011. Also one of the onlyfew Historical Dolls not set in a year ending in '4.
* Kirsten Larson (1854): One of the original three, pulled from the lineup in 2010. Swedish immigrant to Minnesota in Pioneer Times. The series focuses on the difficulties of adapting to a new life in harsh surroundings and features many staples of "frontier" stories, such as scary weather, a strict [[Schoolmarm]] and a [[Black Best Friend|secret Native American friend]].
* Addy Walker (1864): The first non-white doll. First a slave in North Carolina, then escapes to Philadelphia, during [[The American Civil War]]. Her family is separated and has to reunite, and stories focus on issues faced by former slaves, such as catching up on the education they'd been denied and the fact that "free" black people weren't all that free, even in the North.
* Samantha Parkington (1904): One of the original three, pulled from the lineup in 2009 and was re-released in 2014 as part of the BeForever line. Marketed as Victorian Era despite 1904 being [[The Edwardian Era]]. She's a rich orphan being raised by her conservative grandmother in upstate New York. She learns about the women's suffrage movement and the horrors of child labor.
* Rebecca Rubin (1914): Russian Jewish immigrant living in the Lower East Side of Manhattan and aspires to be a movie actress, despite her parents and grandparents' more traditional views.
* Kit Kittredge (1934): Cincinnati, Ohio, during [[The Great Depression]]. Learning to make-do with and without a lot of things that many people then took for granted.
* MollyNanea McIntireMitchell (19441941): TheReleased lastin of2017 and the originalsecond threeBeForever-exclusive who's still going.character, SheNanea lives in IllinoisHawaii duringwhen [[Worldthe WarPearl II]],Harbor whileattack hertook fatherplace. isThe servingwar inseverely Englandaffected asher alife doctor,as she and her booksfriends are largelycaught aboutup adapting toin the changesconflict broughtand onher bybooks warstart just before the bombing.
* Molly McIntire (1944): She lives in Illinois during [[World War II]], while her father is serving in England as a doctor, and her books are largely about adapting to the changes brought on by war. Emily Bennett, an English war evacuee and the family's ward, was released as a Best Friend doll in 2006. They were both retired in 2013, though Molly was re-released as a Costco bundle in 2018.
* Maryellen Larkin (1954): The first character to be released after the BeForever reboot, hailing from Daytona Beach, Florida. A polio survivor (thus making her the first character to have a disability, though it isn't explicitly shown in her doll) and the middle child in a large family, she tries to make herself heard.
* Julie Albright (1974): Lives in [[San Francisco]] in [[The Seventies]]. She learns how to deal with the changes her parents' divorce caused to her life while navigating social upheavals like [[You Go, Girl!|second-wave feminism]], the environmentalist movement, and the changing rights of racial minorities (explored through her relationship with her Chinese best friend).
* Courtney Moore (1986): Hailing from Orange Valley, California, Courtney is into video games such as ''[[Pac-Man]]'' and STEM subjects. Has two best friends whom she hangs out with at the local video game arcade, and dreams about a video game character whose name is "Crystal Starshooter".
 
There is also a set of dolls, called "My American Girl", which offers multiple dolls of varying looks to make into a personal character. This can lead to [[Mary Sue|some unusual characters]].
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=== {{tropelist|The ''[[American Girl]]'' series, toy line, and fandom show examples of: ===}}
 
* [[Adaptation Dye Job]]: in the original Felicity books, Felicity's best friend Elizabeth is a brunette, but in the movie (and later, for her doll) she's a blond.
* [[All Girls Like Ponies]]: Felicity, Kaya, and a big chunk of the modern collection.
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* [[Edible Theme Naming]]: The Coconut pets are all named after various food items.
* [[Even the Dog Is Ashamed]]: From Lindsey's book --
{{quote| It didn't get any better when I got home, either. Mom met me at the door with her own version of the asparagus face. Even my dog, Mr. Tiny, the most loyal and fabulous wiener dog in the history of the world, lowered his tail and slunk down to the basement at the sight of me.}}
* [[Everything's Better with Llamas]]: Chrissa, the girl of the year in 2009, has a pet llama named Starburst.
* [[Every Proper Lady Should Curtsy]]: In ''Happy Birthday, Molly!'', one of Molly's friends tries to curtsy while wearing pants when she meets the English girl Emily, and she says that she thought English girls always did that. Felicity and her peers have to learn for real.
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* [[Mr. Fanservice]]: Why Kevin Zegers was cast as Ben Davidson in ''Felicity: An American Girl Adventure'' and likewise for Max Thieriot as Will Shepherd when the AG movies went theatrical in 2008 with ''Kit Kittredge: An American Girl''. This trope also appears in the books, where readers have admitted to crushing on male characters drawn beguilingly handsome such as Kit's older brother Charlie from her books.
* [[Nice Job Breaking It, Hero]]: Lindsey, [[Stop Helping Me!|over and over and over again.]] Although it's not just Lindsey -- April indirectly gives her the idea to put smiley-face stickers on the neighbors' trash cans, which lands her in hot water with them, her mother, and the ''police.''
* [[Not the Intended Use]]:
* [[Official Cosplay Gear]]: There were girl-sized outfits and accessories that matched the outfits available for the Historical Characters. Now this is generally only applied to their nightclothes and the modern outfits.
** In-universe with Kit's mother Margaret who used fabric from feed sacks to make Kit's birthday outfit.<ref>[https://americangirl.fandom.com/wiki/Birthday_Dress_and_Headband Birthday Dress and Headband]</ref> [[Truth In Television]] as housewives repurposed flour sack fabric into articles of clothing since the early 20th century. This led George P. Plant Milling Company and other firms to sell flour and feed packaged in dress-quality sacks especially during the Great Depression and World War II when fabric was in short supply.
** In terms of doll maintenance and repair, benzoyl peroxide, normally used and sold as acne treatment, is often if not always used to get rid of ink and marker stains off a doll's vinyl skin.
* [[Official Cosplay Gear]]: There were girl-sized outfits and accessories that matched the outfits available for the Historical Characters. Now this is generally only applied to their nightclothes and the modern outfits. The BeForever reboot changed this to outfits ''inspired'' by the characters rather than ''directly based on'' their outfits.
* [[Orphanage of Fear]]: Nellie and her sisters get sent to one of these. Thank goodness Samantha helps them escape and they all end up [[Happily Adopted|adopted by Samantha's rich family]].
* [[Parental Abandonment]]: A few, like Samantha, the orphan. Addy is also a partial case of this, as only she and her mother make the initial journey north. In ''Addy's Surprise,'' she is reunited with her father.
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* [[Proper Lady]]: Elizabeth. This is also how Grandmary is trying to raise Samantha.
* [[Raised by Grandparents]]: Samantha
* [[Recursive Canon]]: Courtney Moore was given a Molly doll by her father during the year American Girl was founded. Assuming that the characters do have a shared universe, it could be implied that Molly and the rest of the cast were real people in the ''American Girl'' mythos, and that their toys and stories were based on their lives.
* [[Retcon]]: This is dramatically seen with Elizabeth Cole -- Felicity's best friend -- being changed from a brown-eyed brunette to a blue-eyed blonde. All the images and text of Felicity's stories were updated to make it like she'd always been blonde.
** A more minor example is Emily. She was originally portrayed as having a bob-like hairstyle, sheand was later reillustrated to have shoulder-length hair following Molly's movie.
* [[Rule of Three]]: The first three girls were released together: Samantha, Kirsten, and Molly.
* [[Shadow Archetype]]:
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* [[Strictly Formula]]: The central books always followed a pattern of 'Meet ____' (introduction), '___ Learns a Lesson' (school), '___'s Surprise' ([[Christmas Episode]]), 'Happy Birthday, ___!' (self-explanatory), '___ Saves the Day!' (adventure), and 'Changes for ___' (winter, New Year's, or some sort of closure to the story). The books broke the pattern with Kaya because Native Americans obviously didn't have things like schoolhouses or Christmas, and all dolls released after her have followed a similarly loose formula.
** This also counts as [[Idiosyncratic Episode Naming]].
* [[Take That]]: The racist class bully in ''Melody 1963: Love Has to Win'' is a thinly-veiled pot shot at [[Donald Trump]]. [[Word of God]] has it that the Donald character was to be named Douglas, only for someone misreading the script, and the name stuck. Given how Trump's political ambitions were all over the headlines in 2016, not to mention the rise of neo-fascist and racist movements in the United States along with Trump's connections to them have drawn the ire of many, this isn't surprising.
* [[Title Drop]]: Occurs in the last line of ''Really, Truly Ruthie''.
* [[Token Minority]]: Josefina, Ivy, and Kaya all have unique ethnicitiesethnic identities. Also seen inMany people's collections when people will have one or two minority dolls. This, mostly consistconsisting of limited edition dolls or [[But Not Too Black|Just Like You #26, who appears biracial black.]] There have only been two Jewish dolls: Lindsey (who was only available for a short time) and Rebecca.
* [[Tomboy and Girly Girl]]: Felicity and Elizabeth, Kit and Ruthie, Julie and Ivy. Note that [[Real Women Never Wear Dresses|the tomboy is always the star of the series]].
** Molly's friends Linda and Susan, with Molly as [[The Kirk]].
* [[We Interrupt This Program]]: The NBC broadcast of ''Saige Paints The Sky'' was interrupted at the last minute by the George Zimmerman verdict. The parental outrage ensuing from the sudden interruption may have accounted for why ''Isabelle Dances Into the Spotlight'' was aired on the Disney Channel as it would be far less likely to be disrupted by a broadcast interruption if it were aired on a niche children's network.
* [[Wounded Gazelle Gambit]]: Lindsey stops Blair from tormenting April, so Blair pretends that Lindsey attacked her on the way to school. It only partially works.
* [[You Mean "Xmas"]]: Up until they created Kaya, each of the American Girl characters had a Christmas story as a part of her book series. Since Kaya obviously wouldn't have celebrated Christmas, living before the Nez Perce had much contact with Europeans, they gave her a story about "giving" as her obligatory "holiday" book.
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[[Category:Toys]]
[[Category:American Girls Collection]]
[[Category:Toys of the 1980s]]