Object
Raggedy Ann Doll with Knife
A child-sized Raggedy Ann cloth doll: matted red yarn hair, a faded gingham dress with threadbare seams, stuffing peeking through worn cloth, and a small kitchen knife crudely lodged through the doll's throat. Dark stains rim the wound as if dried blood stained the fabric. The doll arrives packaged as a message; White House aides handle it gingerly, recoil at its brutality, and present it to the President as physical evidence and a confrontational token.
2 appearances
Purpose
To serve as a delivered threatening artifact and piece of physical evidence intended to intimidate and communicate menace.
Significance
Functions as the narrative catalyst that transforms a PR dispute into a personal moral and political crisis: the doll provokes President Bartlet's fury, demands a public denunciation of the extremist group (the Lambs of God), and precipitates the ejection of visiting Christian leaders, making the toy both evidentiary and rhetorical leverage.
Appearances in the Narrative
When this object appears and how it's used