Curious. When I was a child, *** dolls were quite popular. These were not golliwogs but black versions of conventional white dolls. Black people were unknown in Britain, save for a very few in big port cities, yet these dolls were universal. What message, since we now look for messages, was in that?
And the original golliwog story, The Adventures of Two Dutch Dolls, could be read as a lesson in racial tolerance or acceptance. On his first appearance, he is described in terms intended to suggest revulsion in the other characters, but he proves to be a good character in the end.
But the term, reduced to 'wog' has become a racist insult and the image, notwithstanding that the garb was that of black performers in vaudeville,regarded as racially offensive. Patently, that a white Jew, Asa Yolson, should make a fortune by blacking up to sing sentimental songs, as Al Jolson, is as distasteful now as it is ironic; one oppressed minority imitating another; and it should have been so then, but the golliwog should have remained innocent.