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'Greater Britain': Late Imperial Travel Writing and the Settler Colonies

Version 2 2025-01-15, 01:09
Version 1 2023-05-22, 14:51
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posted on 2025-01-15, 01:09 authored by A Johnston

The Chicago World’s Fair celebrated the so-called discovery of the Americas by Columbus, and so it was officially named “The Columbian Exposition”, despite being a year after the actual 400-year anniversary. The exposition was a conscious exercise in nation building, looking back as it did to the European discovery of the land, and to the future, as it sought to consolidate a national sense of “Manifest Destiny” that was bound up with industry, capitalism and imperialist expansion. The sheer volume of industry on display was overwhelming, and the sense that the fair ushered in the Modern was highlighted by a deliberate decision to make electricity a major feature, with the Fair using three times more than it took to light the entire city of Chicago. G. Brown Goode, assistant secretary at the Smithsonian, was placed in charge of exhibit classification at Chicago.

History

Publication title

Oceania and the Victorian Imagination: Where All Things Are Possible

Editors

RD Fulton and PH Hoffenberg

Pagination

31-44

ISBN

9781409457114

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Ashgate

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Extent

12

Rights statement

Copyright 2013 Richard D. Fulton and Peter H. Hoffenberg and contributors

Socio-economic Objectives

130203 Literature

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