Phenomenes Particulars a la Mer card from the game Le Tour de Monde
Maker
Charles Letaille
Datec 1840
Object number00030367
NameCard
MediumInk on paper
DimensionsOverall: 51 x 80 mm
ClassificationsToys, games and souvenirs
Credit LineANMM Collection
DescriptionA card from the French board game 'Le Tour De Monde' published by Charles Letaille.
The card is an action card reading "9E gage. Penitence: fragment a lire.Phenomenes particuliers a la mer, phosphorescence, trombes, montagnes flottantes, glaces polaires. (Revue de l'univers, tome 1. P.86 & 91)" [9th pledge. Penance: fragment to be read. Special phenomena at sea; phosphorescence, water spouts, floating mountains, polar ice. (Review of the Universe, volume 1.P86 and 91)].
HistoryAs simple as this children's board game may appear, it reveals much about 19th century French society. This was a period of the rise of the middle class in Europe which meant a growth in leisure time and money to spend on leisure items. As a response to this new market, publishers such as Charles Letaille and map makers began to commercially manufacture games aimed at families and children.
These games were relatively cheap to produce and early topics were predominantly moralistic or educational. Quite dull to modern children! Parents were attracted to the idea that children could learn through play and as time went on games became more nationalistic and encompassing.
Based on current events and the competition between European countries to expand their influence over the world, games often involved races around the globe to reach foreign countries before other players. This relatively simple concept reflected Europeans commercial and racial attitudes to 'others'. Depictions and language used in these games were usually negative in their colonial approach. By playing these games children absorbed the contemporary ideas of their country's dominance and the state of the wider world through political and economic eyes.
Towards the end of the 19th century the idea of the 'child leisure culture' was firmly established and many games were produced for the purpose of purely entertaining children rather than educating them.
SignificanceGames such as this were an important means whereby under the guise of play children can comprehend the extent of the French colonial empire. Equally, it's fascinating to see how images of exploration, swirl about, changing and transforming, the further they travel from their original source and reconfirming the 19th century French view of the world.