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Post a Comment On: Internal Monologue

"Politics of a Lego town"

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Anonymous Anonymous said...

I actually had a similar reaction to it. Not that I wanted to see a picture of Legotown, but it was more that I wanted more acknowledgment of the non-political dimensions of this exercise with the kids. The teachers talk about spending an hour with the kids talking about the socio-political dynamics of their Lego play, but it's almost as if it didn't occur to them that the kids just wanted to play Legos again. It seems like "Carl" in the story was arguing against his inherent social "power" as a Legotown builder, not because he was uncomfortable with having it, but because he saw what was going on and knew that would help everyone get the Legos back. I would like to think I was pretty intellectual for an 8-year-old, but I would have not appreciated taking away the community's games to prove a political point. The real wielders of power in this scenario were the teachers, and benign as their reign seems to have been, there's also something a bit fucked about taking toys away to engage in social experimentation on your students.

I'd consider myself a liberal, but this seemed like far-left ideologuery taken too far. Really fascinating article though, and pictures would have certainly brought it to life.

8:59 PM, February 23, 2008

Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'd like to see how two groups might progress if one was "free market" and one was "socialist". Would a juvenile Donald Trump ("juvenile in age not personality--we already have one like that)crush the competition while the coop side produces the eqivalent of Communist block housing? Perhaps the repressed Lego people would need to create their own mini-Lego toys as outlets for their imagination. Then the Lego people would have to monitor each other like East German informants. Some would escape to the "free zone" only to find that nothing is free but the right to compete in a system rigged for the powerful.Such dueling economies could teach kids on many levels,

3:06 PM, February 26, 2008

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