WORLD'S FAIRS EXPOSed by Pam Dewey
Illustration of the Great Exhibition, London, 1851
WORLD'S FAIRS EXPOSed
by
Pam Dewey
Pam Dewey
Episode 1 - “Fair Enough: The "Great Exhibition," London,
1851
Episode 2 - “Yankee Doodle Palace: The New York World’s Fair,
1853-1854”
Episode 3 - “The ‘Happy Birthday’ World’s Fair: Visiting the Centennial
Exhibition of 1876”
Episode 4 – “1893 Chicago World’s Fair, Part 1: Uncle Sam
Welcomes the World”
This four-part presentation on world
fairs by author, blogger and master videographer Pam Dewey is an outstanding exposé on the visual and
material display of nations and cultures. Here is Pam’s description of her production contained in the YouTube posting of Episode 1:
“This is an
introductory video to a DocuCommentary series entitled "WORLD'S FAIRS
EXPOSed," which focuses primarily on the World's Fairs held in the United
States since 1853. The London Great Exhibition of 1851 was the first ever
World's Fair, and led directly to the establishment of periodic World's Fairs
as a feature of American history for the next century and more. Each video in
the series first provides an informative and entertaining overview of a
specific fair from the point of view of the visitors of the era. Then it
explores behind the scenes, to consider how the fair both reflected, and
AFFECTED, the social, cultural, economic, political, and philosophical aspects of
the America of its time. It also considers what long-lasting influence what
particular fairs may have had on the future of the country up to the 21st
century.”
While watching each episode, in
the back of my mind, I kept trying to tie fairs, of all kinds, to
culture. That is, culture as an anthropological concept.
The fairs, all of them touched
on generally and specifically by Dewey, especially beginning in 1851, attempt
to show material manifestations and representations of the beliefs, values,
methods and products (the culture) of nations. Each seems to do so to various
ends - education, national pride, internationalism, and others. Notable, I
think, was the American omission of slavery in its exhibit at the
1851 fair in London.
But fairs also seem to
have a role in enculturation, the learning of one’s culture, that parenting,
schools, books, various media, anthropology monographs don't. They are highly
sensory and experiential. They also have a generalizing, unifying societal goal
to them, a goal that is usually achieved to one degree or another in every fair
goer. Fairs also seem to have an astonishingly strong and deep impact on
individuals who attend them. I seldom think of culture, cultures or societies
displayed on grand unifying scales as they are at fairs.
I guess on one hand unifying a
people, a nation or society, or even the world for that matter, at least for a
short time ever few years through fairs, is a good thing. Well, if not a
good thing then it is clearly not a bad thing. On the other hand, unless it
contributes to ethnocentrism, jingoism, uber-nationalism, racism, militancy,
etc.
For me, the
best fairs are those that stress cosmopolitanism, globalism, and the
accomplishments, shortcomings and noble unifying goals of Humankind as whole. In
this regard consider the teachings of the Bahá'í, "the earth is one
country, and mankind its citizens;" or Socrates who said "I am not an
Athenian or a Greek, but a citizen of the world;" and later, similarly,
Diogenes declared he too was "a citizen of the world."
I think national and world fairs
are of better to service to Humankind as a whole than those that give priority
to national pride boosterism and sci-tech accomplishments. That said, I’ve
attended a number of trade fairs in Africa over the years that to some degree
contributed to national pride and showcased the use and availability of science
and technology as means of national and local community development.
I'm like many others. I like going
to a fair ever so often but always come away a bit confused as to
what impact they have had on me - awe, new knowledge, excitement, patriotism,
propaganda. The purposes of fairs are as various as the people and
institutions that stage them; and reactions are as varied as the people who
attend them.
I like fairs yet feel a little
manipulated or indoctrinated by them. That's a good thing. They unsettle me and
that is usually a good state of mind for me to do some learning, and growing.
Enjoy!
JL
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