Canadian culture is notoriously hard to define (I've tried on several occasions to do this) but that does not mean that it does not exist. I would be interested to see if visitors from other countries can better define Canada's culture. I suspect that defining culture may be somewhat similar to accents. People who have accents generally don't realize that they have accents because its just the way they speak, but others can notice it very easily. Canadians may have a hard time defining our culture because we just view it as the way we live while an outsider may be able to define it easier.
Anyways, I've spoken to many of my American friends and they've said that Canadian culture is definitely different then American culture. Since Canada isn't just emulating American culture there is little doubt in my mind that Canada does have a unique and distinct culture. The trouble is figuring out exactly what that unique culture is.
hard to define because it has a little bit of everything and not so much of its own. US, UK, France, even Asia. Yes, I agree that Canadian culture is somewhat different from American culture, but the similarity is like 85%. There is difference but not enough to make it stand out, like the French are different from the Germans, or the Japanese different from the Chinese.
It is unsurprising because Canada had its own constitution completely independent from the UK only in 1982. Canadian citizenship didn't exist until 1947, and before that, it was essentially a part of Great Britain.
Is it because "we just view it as the way we live while an outsider may be able to define it easier"? good try but hardly. I am sure ask any Italian or Chinese, they will have no trouble telling all about what their country is about and how it is different from the rest of the world. And plus, most outsiders are NOT able to define it either, not just Canadians.
I know it is hard for Canadians to admit the fact that Canada does NOT possess a distinct culture and identity - it is still forming - and that people will keep arguing that it is a different culture due to the pride thing.
Many have said "American friends" telling them how Canadian culture is vastly different from American culture, as if it is solid evidence. I am sure they are just being polite and nice. Why would an American friend you are familiar rudely say "you guys have no culture and everything is basically borrowed from us"? It is like your friend will also say your kid is cute and smart. Why do they want to offend you any way? But as a Canadian, when you travel to or live in urban US, do you really experience some sort of "culture shock"? Seriously? I have lived a large city in both country, and I am confident to say the similarities (85%) completely overwhelms the differences (15%) when everything considered.
One way for Canada to develop its own culture is to stop relying on American culture so habitually every single day (of course stop speaking English would be the best efficient way but not possible), ranging from P&G consumer goods to what you watch and listen on the media. Second is to start considering the US as simply foreign country like the rest of the world (cut the umbilical cord). The US should not be the benchmark of everything we do, there is the rest of the world. There are many small-big neighbouring countries and I have never seem one dependent on the other like Canada does on the US.
The US has an influential culture, and being its small neighbour sharing the same language is a big misfortune culturally wise. If everything is business as usual, Canada will never be able to create its own culture, and the rest of the world will never recognize it.