The Star Malaysia

Mixed views over Day of the Dead’s ‘skeleton’ Barbie doll

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MEXICO CITY: She’s been a princess, a president, a Marine Corps sergeant, an astronaut and a Star Wars stormtroop­er. In Mexico for the Day of the Dead festival, Barbie is even a skeleton.

Yet while fans of the iconic doll see it as an homage to the country’s rich tradition, critics say it is little more than cultural appropriat­ion.

Mattel has launched the second Barbie based on “Catrina”, a skeletal representa­tion of death created by cartoonist Jose Guadalupe Posada that is a symbol of one of Mexico’s most important festivals.

The US toymaker says the doll “honours the traditions, symbols and rituals” of the Day of the Dead, which is celebrated on Nov 1-2.

But some in Mexico see the Barbie – which has a price tag of around US$72 (RM300) – as just another example of big brands cashing in on the country’s heritage.

“The cultural, hereditary and symbolic importance that this holiday has for Mexico opens up in the eyes of the market opportunit­ies that are exploited by these firms,” said sociologis­t Roberto Alvarez.

The Day of the Dead “should be a solemn subject”, but it has become a commercial event in the United States since featuring in movies such as Coco, the animated fantasy released by Disney’s Pixar studio in 2017, Alvarez said.

Fans of the iconic doll see “Catrina” Barbie – which bears certain similariti­es to renowned painter Frida Kahlo – as a respectful tribute.

“It means that they take notice of our traditions,” said Zoila Muntane, a 54-year-old artist and doll collec

tor who has 2,000 Barbies.

This year Barbie wears a blushcolou­red lace dress and a crown of skeleton hands holding roses and marigolds, unlike the first Day of the Dead edition in 2019 which was dressed in black. Its creator, Mexican-American designer Javier Meabe, said he sought to “create more awareness about the celebratio­n”, which Unesco in 2003 named an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

 ??  ?? Appropriat­ion or tribute?: ‘Catrina’ Barbie dolls at the Museum of the Old Mexican Toy in Mexico City.
Appropriat­ion or tribute?: ‘Catrina’ Barbie dolls at the Museum of the Old Mexican Toy in Mexico City.

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