Saturday, November 7, 2020

Matchbox and Nostalgia

There’s a bug on the table.  It’s called the Beetle.  Caught it, turned it sideways, and placed it in plastic to preserve it.
 
Brand: Matchbox 
Scale: 1/58 
Model: 1962 Volkswagen Beetle
 
 

I got this miniature because we had the real thing in this color when I was a child in the ‘70s (our Beetle, I expect, was a 1970s model).  Every afternoon, our drivers would line up to park the vehicles: Jeep, Toyota Land Cruiser, Toyota Corona, Ford Cortina, Mercedes Benz (a finback reminiscent of Batman’s bat mobile), etc.  It was amusing to watch the drivers maneuver over a score of vehicles. 

Decades later, I would have some sort of cognitive dissonance after learning that the production of Volkswagen Beetle had been commissioned by notorious anti-Semite Adolf Hitler.  The Beetle was designed by Ferdinand Porsche (whose magnificent cars I also collect in miniatures).  Bela Barenyi is also credited as the designer of the Beetle.  My dissonance was something like, “Should I still love a car commissioned by a tyrant?  It’s designed by Porsche anyhow…”
 
The Beetle stood out to me likely because of its solid orange color.  Having the real thing as part of my childhood is the reason why the Beetle is one of my favorite model cars to collect.  Nostalgia is one of the driving forces behind why collectors hoard toys.  We’re not just collecting toys.  We’re collecting and re-collecting memories.
 
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Originally published in a slightly different form on my Facebook wall days before today.