Abstract

In nineteenth-century Romanian newspapers and magazines, the idea of children’s play was strictly combined with that of education. By encouraging and helping children to produce their own toys or to create their own plays, parents provided education and proper development to their children. Pediatricians quoted in newspapers praised villages and boroughs where children were free to run all day long, to play in the fresh air far removed from any kind of isolation, compared to their counterparts who belonged to “the bourgeois world” of the city. Similarly, children of the elite were prohibited from active and unstructured play. Wealthy children were believed to live in isolation because their parents considered them to be superior. Newspaper and magazine articles discouraged parents from buying manufactured toys, suggesting instead that children build their own toys. Educational books were the only items recommended for consumption. It was thought that fantasy and creativity stimulated children’s imaginations more than store-bought or manufactured dolls and toys.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call