125:. It was featured on chocolate bars and blocks and was very popular. Its appearance was that of a child, with a cute and non-threatening appearance, containing stereotypical features of African-Americans. Initially, three were created, but they were reduced to one in 1922. Gipkens was commissioned to create the icon for Sarotti's 50 year anniversary. Multiple inspirations have been given for the creation of the figure; Gipkens cites Sarotti's location on what translates from German as
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95:. With the change of the majority stockholding the factory merged to Nestlé. The factory in Hattersheim was in the 1960s one of the biggest companies in Hattersheim and Main-Taunus district with a workforce up to 2,000 workers. The factory was closed down in 1994 and has been officially designated a historic site by Hesse.
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In 2004, two years after
Stollwerck was bought by the Swiss-Belgian company Barry Callebaut, a new icon was launched in reaction to criticism. The new figure, a "Magician of the Senses" with golden skin, is no longer holding chocolate, but juggling golden stars. The image remains reminiscent of the
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The Nazis had an ambivalent of
Sarotti-Mohr, considering its exotic appearance to be un-German, but appreciating its references to colonialism. During the Nazi-era, despite being featured alongside a swastika on some packaging, it was not visible in public as chocolate was not commonly consumed.
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During the period after WWII, the figure was very popular. In some fairs, Afro-German children were employed to pose as what was referred to as a live
Sarotti-Mohr. Particularly since the 1990s, the figure was subject to increased public scrutiny for racism.
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No. 57 (then Belle-Alliance-Str. 81) since 1881, extended by
Mehringdamm No. 55 in 1903 (then Belle-Alliance-Str. 82) and Mehringdamm No. 53 in 1906 (then Belle-Alliance-Str. 83). In 1913 the factory moved into a new building on Teilestraße 13–15 in
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became the majority stockholder in the company. This traditional German brand is only known in its home market. In 1998 Nestlé sold
Sarotti to Stollwerck Chocolates.
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Hackenesch, Silke (January 2014). "Advertising
Chocolate, Consuming Race? On the Peculiar Relationship of Chocolate Advertising, German Colonialism, and Blackness".
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In 1868 Hugo
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to increase chocolate consumption after chocolate production had decreased with World War 1. It is a
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figure, dressed in brightly colored and detailed clothes: a turban,
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Another industrial chocolate production of
Sarotti took place in
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The
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