The World’s Fair had long been a showcase of the progress and enlightenment of the modern Western nation, justified partly through the popularization of the new field of sociology that provided a linear evolutionary model of human sociocultural development. This model was available for illustration in St. Louis in 1904 largely due to the American possession of the Philippines. The new colony boasted many ethnic groups at various levels of social and cultural development, allowing the Fair organizers to display both the range of the evolutionary sociocultural continuum and the benefits of American colonialism in one large 47-acre “habitat.” Another effective method through which the continuum was realized was popular music at the Fair, espec...
Before a thronging crowd at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St Louis, Henry Adams ‘profess...
Musical exoticism is the evocation of a culture different from that of the composer. It o...
The 1876 United States Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia was not only the United States\u27 firs...
© 2018 Dr Sarah KirbyBetween 1879 and 1890 there was barely a year in which an international exhibit...
In 1939, the United States’ strained relations with countries in Asia and Europe echoed the challeng...
The Exposition Universelle of 1867 was the second of its kind to be held in Paris and was the larges...
Over the past twenty years international and universal world expositions have been extensively resea...
World\u27s fairs and expositions were major social, political, economic, and cultural events in the ...
Over the past twenty years international and universal world expositions have been extensively resea...
World's fairs and expositions have long served as important sites of cultural display. From their ea...
World fairs and exhibitions served as important venues for empires to showcase their industrial and ...
World exhibitions are didactical instruments in the hands of the upcoming elites who instructed the ...
textThe German exhibit of interiors in the Palace of Varied Industries and the Austrian Pavilion at ...
The international exhibitions of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are now generally...
This thesis examines the live exhibition of Native American, Chinese, Japanese, Alaskan, Hawaiian, S...
Before a thronging crowd at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St Louis, Henry Adams ‘profess...
Musical exoticism is the evocation of a culture different from that of the composer. It o...
The 1876 United States Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia was not only the United States\u27 firs...
© 2018 Dr Sarah KirbyBetween 1879 and 1890 there was barely a year in which an international exhibit...
In 1939, the United States’ strained relations with countries in Asia and Europe echoed the challeng...
The Exposition Universelle of 1867 was the second of its kind to be held in Paris and was the larges...
Over the past twenty years international and universal world expositions have been extensively resea...
World\u27s fairs and expositions were major social, political, economic, and cultural events in the ...
Over the past twenty years international and universal world expositions have been extensively resea...
World's fairs and expositions have long served as important sites of cultural display. From their ea...
World fairs and exhibitions served as important venues for empires to showcase their industrial and ...
World exhibitions are didactical instruments in the hands of the upcoming elites who instructed the ...
textThe German exhibit of interiors in the Palace of Varied Industries and the Austrian Pavilion at ...
The international exhibitions of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries are now generally...
This thesis examines the live exhibition of Native American, Chinese, Japanese, Alaskan, Hawaiian, S...
Before a thronging crowd at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St Louis, Henry Adams ‘profess...
Musical exoticism is the evocation of a culture different from that of the composer. It o...
The 1876 United States Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia was not only the United States\u27 firs...