Souvenir of Canada
Souvenir of Canada is a 2002 book written by Canadian author Douglas Coupland. A feature film based on the book was released theatrically and on home video in 2006.
In the book's introduction, Coupland states his intention was to author a book about Canada "that only Canadians would get." Souvenir of Canada is thus a book that is mostly about fairly obscure Canadian cultural matters, many of which reflect the author's own experiences growing up as a Canadian baby boomer.
Arranged alphabetically, the book profiles over a dozen random and unique Canadian "things," such as billingualism, Anglophila, beer bottles, cigarette warning labels, Kraft macaroni and cheese, and the Trans-Canada Highway. Each item is given a witty summary by Coupland, often drawing on personal anecdotes. Many also feature a unique photographic illustration, either through stock footage or an original photo by Coupland himself.
Though much of the book mocks Canadian nationalism and various national myths of Canada, Coupland states that he still considers himself patriotic. In analyzing various mundane items his intent is to show "another side" of Canadian culture that is less glamorous, but "still a part of who we are."
In 2004 a sequel was released, Souvenir of Canada 2. It largely copied the format of the original, profiling new cultural artifacts. It also featured a photo essay on "Canada House," an abandoned pre-fabricated home in Vancouver that Coupland had decorated with sculptures and furniture made of items he considered to be quintessentially Canadian. His 2005 book Terry, about Terry Fox is also heavily derivative of the Souvenir of Canada format.
The documentary adaptation of the book, also entitled Souvenir of Canada, is a humorous and candid portrait of Coupland who is filmed while creating his art installation "Canada House". The film also interweaves essays from the book visualized imaginatively through animation, dramatic scenes and old stock footage. The film was produced by Media Headquarters Film & Television and the National Film Board of Canada, and is distributed in Canada by Maple Pictures.