Title: Identity
1Identity
- Who are you? How do you know?
2People use various things to identify themselves
- EG
- Color of hair
- Gender
- Race
- Style of clothing
- Teams they are on
- Entertainment preferences (cowboy music or rap)
-
- Is being Canadian a part of your identity what
is a Canadian
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4- Stereotypes Lumberjack, fur trader, igloo, eat
blubber, ride dog sled - Dont know Jimmy, Sally or Suzie (small
population) - Explaining our differences PM instead of
President, bilingual (not American British
spelling/pronunciation - zed), peacekeepers vs
policing, diversity vs assimilation - Pronouncing about
- Proudly sew flag (world likes Canadians)
- Beaver
- Explaining Canadian terms toque, chesterfield
- Describing us 2nd largest landmass, first nation
of hockey, the best part of North America - Thank you (polite)
5What is a Canadian?
6Symbols of other nations
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8National Identity
- Key Features of Canadian Identity
- Geography
- Northern location, next to US
- 2nd largest country
- Natural Resources
- Wealthy, dont depend on others
- Society
- urban, modern
- Cultural make-up
- Bilingual, multicultural
- World Position
- Middle power, peacekeeper
9Watch for the following
- Railway unified Canada coast to coast
- Men drinking could be reference to prohibition
(US Rum Runners) - Soldiers heading off to war
- note the British flag World War One
- Womens hockey team
- Soldier returning home billboard in background
to buy war bonds - Lowering of the old Canadian flag and raising the
new flag in 1960s - Watching the hockey game on TV
- Summit Series
- Saturday nights
- Paul Anka popular singer
- Miss Prairie, guys on Atlantic coast (our
diversity) - Crazy fan at hockey game
- Niagara Falls (tourism, geography)
- Air Canada plane at foreign airport (Tehran
hostages?) - Lumberjack log rolling
- Commercial
- Rugby, speaking in French
- William Shatner famous Canadian actor
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11The Canadian National Anthem
- What images/symbols are there in our national
anthem how does it compare to other anthems
like the French or American? - We Are the Beaver
12- The US is the eagle, Russia is the
bear,Australia is the kangaroo, cause they're
kind of weird down there.Yeah, India is the
tiger, that stands so proud and tall,But Canada
is the greatest of them all.We are the beaver,
we're furry and we're freeYeah, we are the
beaver, we got two big front teethYeah, we are
the beaver, we can chew right through small
treesWe are the beaver.You might think a
rodent is a pretty lame choiceFor a national
animal, but don't you listen to that voice.No,
cause all them birds and predators, just take
from the landBut the beaver, always gives a
dam.We are the beaver, we got cute little
webbed feetYeah, we are the beaver, it's bark we
like to eatYeah, we are the beaver, a nickel we
complete..The eagle flies the sky above and
swoops down on its preyThe big bear will maul
anyone who dares gets in its wayThe tiger is the
greatest of the hunters today.But the beaver it
can build dams. Yeah,The beaver it can build
dams.We are the beaver, we slap our tails when
danger is nearby.We are the beaver, we got
waterproof hides.Yeah, we are the beaver, we got
big bums and beady eyes.We are the beaver, we
are the beaver, we are the beaver.We are the
beaver, our name is often used as a
double-entendre We are the beaver, cause in
Canada both French and English belongYeah, we
are the beaver, and the subject of this song We
are the beaver, we are the beaver, we are the
beaver.
13Institutions like the Bank of Canada and the
Canadian Mint celebrate the symbols of Canada
- Wilfred Laurier
- West Block of Parliament
- Winter sports and famous Canadian hockey story
14Bank of Canada Symbolism
- John A. Macdonald
- Library of Parliament
- Canadas military history including peacekeeping
and Vimy Memorial
15- Head of State Queen
- Center Block of Parliament
- Pacific First Nations imagery
16- Mackenzie King
- Parliamentary Clock Tower
- Focus on human rights, including the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and the Famous Five
17- Robert Borden
- East Block Parliamentary Offices
- Themes of Canadian exploration in the past
(canoe) and today (satellite)
18Myths Defining Canadian Identity
- Myths are common tales or beliefs that we hold
true as Canadians often they are stereotypes
held by Canadian and other countries (they often
have a piece of truth think about the stories
that are often told at family gatherings and how
they change over time.
19- Rugged Canadian
- Frontier Spirit
- Conquering the unknown
20- Canadians are Peacekeepers
Myth that we are anti-war and providers of peace,
always involved in UN peacekeeping Lately, we
have moved away from peacekeeping - Afghanistan
is a combat operation
Canada played an important role early on through
Lester Pearson
21- Canada as an inclusive nation
- We pride ourselves on welcoming all
outsiders - Prejudice against Chinese immigrants
- Japanese Internment
- Refusal of Jewish refugees
- Preference of immigrants from Northern European
countries until the 1960s
22What creates our identity a shared history?
23War of 1812
- Rejection of American Manifest Destiny
- Belief that the British-Canadians defeated the
American invaders - Many Americans think they won as well
- The importance of this battle is fading from
collective consciousness
24Confederation of Canada
- Louis Lafontaine (Francophone) and Robert Baldwin
(Anglophone) cooperate with each other to create
better democracy in Canada - Union of Upper and Lower Canada the first
representative
government in Canada
Confederation (BNA Act) 1867 - The Dominion
of Canada - Prime Minister John A. Macdonald
- Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,
Ontario, Quebec How many Canadians know these
details??
25What about geography?
- Part of our identity is being the second largest
country in the world, with a harsh climate - But how is our geography a force that divides our
nation-state into different nations?
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27- In the psychological sense, there is no Canadian
nation as there is an American or French nation.
There is a legal and geographic entity, but the
nation does not exist. For there are no objects
that all Canadians share as objects of national
feeling. - (Charles Hanley)
28Canada as a Civic Nation
29We know we are not American
30Things Americans have noticed about us
- A few interesting facts
- Canada has more donut shops per capita than the
United States does. - Canadians consume more Kraft Dinner (aka Kraft
Macaroni Cheese) per capita than any other
nationality on earth. - The CBC's evening news anchor is bald and doesn't
wear a toupee. - Contests run by anyone other than the government
have "skill-testing questions" that winners must
answer correctly before they can claim a prize.
These are usually math problems, and are
administered to get around the law that only the
government can administer lotteries. - The big mass-market beers are Molson and Labatt,
and they're stronger than US beers. The major
cigarette labels are milder than American ones. - There are billboards advertising vacations in
Cuba, and Cuban cigars are freely available. - Nobody worries about losing a life's savings or a
home because of illness. - Teenagers can drink legally. The drinking age in
Quebec, Manitoba, and Alberta is 18 it's 19 in
the rest of the country. - Potato chips come in flavo(u)rs such as salt and
vinegar, ketchup, and "all dressed" - Cars (especially on the Prairies) have electrical
plugs sticking out from under the hoods. These
are for block heaters, to prevent engines from
freezing when it's -40. - People give distances in times, not miles.
- People ask whether you'd like "a coffee" rather
than "some coffee."
31- Canadian language
- arena - An ice rink with seats around it. Could
be any enclosed area with seats for viewing
surrounding it, but the implication is that it's
primarily for hockey. - arse, bum - One's hind quarters. "He kicked me in
the bum." - bag - versus "sack," especially in US midwest
- beater - An old beat-up car.
- Central Canada - Refers to southern Ontario,
actually 1300 miles east of the centre of Canada.
But in their minds... - The West - Refers to any point from Manitoba
(actual centre of Canada) west to the Pacific
Ocean. - chesterfield - A couch, or sofa, or whatever you
call it where you are. - corner store convenience store, usually on a
corner in a residential neighbourhood of a city. - deke - To move quickly
- DUI - Driving under the influence same as DWI,
although limits in Canada are 0.08 vs. 0.1 in US - eavestrough - A gutter, the sort that is attached
to houses and funnels rain water down a pipe. - elastic - rubber band
- go missing - to disappear, become misplaced
- Grade Oner, Twoers, Threers - First, Second,
ThirdGrader - holiday - A vacation or a trip. Also used in the
American sense, meaning a day off work or school. - housecoat - robe, bathrobe
32- keener - Someone very eager and enthusiastic.
Sometimes in the sense of brown-noser, suckup - klick - Kilometer, or kilometer per hour.
- lineup - line.
- pencil crayons colored pencils
- Robertson screws - Screws with a square hole
rather than a straight or X-shaped one. Robertson
screws are just about impossible to strip, unlike
Phillips-head. They'd be popular in the States
except that Henry Ford wanted exclusive rights to
them, and Robertson refused to sell. - runners - sneakers, running shoes
- second-last - Next to last
- ski-doo - Generic term for snowmobile.
- snowbird - Canadian who flees to southern United
States (usually Florida) for some/all winter. - tea towel - dish towel
- toque - Rhymes with "kook." A kind of hat,
everywhere in wintertime. - track pants - sweat pants
- washroom - bathroom
33- Food
- back bacon - Canadian bacon. Sometimes rolled in
peameal (like cornmeal, but from peas). - butter tart - A very small (single-serving) pie.
They taste like pecan pies without the pecans. - chocolate bar - Candy bar. Popular Canadian
brands include Aero, Crispy Crunch, Crunchie,
Coffee Crisp, Caramilk, Bounty. Mars Bars have
darker chocolate and no nuts. Other Canadian
candies include Smarties (imagine very sweet MMs
in brightly colored boxes, not the sweet-tart
chalky things), Mackintosh toffee. - homo milk - Homogenized milk. Known in the States
as whole milk. Nobody here thinks twice about
what images milk cartons with the word "HOMO" in
big letters on the side conjure up in the minds
of Americans - Nanaimo bar - A confection, named for the town of
Nanaimo on Vancouver Island in British Columbia,
that resembles a brownie but is topped with a
layer of white butter cream icing and another of
solid chocolate. - pop - soda.
- poutine (pron. poo-TEEN) Quebecois specialty.
French fries covered in cheese curds and gravy. - Rockets Smarties small, chalky candies
packaged in rolls wrapped in clear plastic. - Smarties - a candy resembling MMs. They do melt
in your hand, and they're a lot sweeter. - Shreddies - A brand of breakfast cereal, vaguely
resembling Chex. - Timbits - Do(ugh)nut holes from Tim Horton's.
34A broadcast created during the 2010 Olympics
35Organizations that Promote Canadian Nationalism
36Hudsons Bay Company
- British Royal Charter - 1670
- Oldest Corporation in North America
- Sold land to create the NWT
37CBC Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
- Canadian Programming (unique from American
stations) - Formed by the Canadian government to protect and
expand Canadian cultural identity
- Hockey Night in Canada
- Miniseries (The Arrow, Top 10 Canadians))
- Road to Avonlea, Corner Gas, Little Mosque on the
Prairie - SCTV, Kids in the Hall
38Museums
- National History Museum
- National Art Gallery
- Museum of Civilizations
- Glenbow Museum
- Military Museums
39Air Canada
- Need for easy communication and transit across a
giant nation-state
- Formed to foster development of air travel in
Canada (modernization)
- Formerly a Crown corporation - now publically
owned
- Notice the symbolism on the plane and the logo
40RCMP Royal Canadian Mounted Police
- Founded to bring order to the west (NWMP)
- Scarlet Uniforms and Stetsons are recognized the
world over as Canadian
41Assignment Creating a Coat of Arms
- CBC News in Review 2010 New Governor General
Coat of Arms