Exhibiting a Nation: Canada at the British Empire Exhibition, 1924-1925
Authors
Anne Clendinning
Abstract
The British Empire Exhibition held in 1924 and 1925 presented a chance for Canada
to assert a national identity and a prominent place, as a self-governing, “white”
dominion, within the British imperial family of nations. Those responsible for the government
pavilion consciously sought to understate regional differences and to construct
and project a unified, homogeneous image of the nation, despite its vast
geographic distances and obvious differences of language and race. While their intentions
were to attract investment and improve export markets for Canadian goods, the
exhibition commissioners assembled a set of images intended to sum up the idea of
Canada. The resulting national representation proved to be contested, fragmented,
and sometimes controversial. But for Canadians who visited the exhibit, the pavilion
seemed to speak on an emotional level, inspiring national identification and pride.