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Study Guide for Mann, Dream of Nation
Mann’s work is not really that old (1982), but already it
is regarded as a classic (and thus reprinted, 2002, in the Carleton Library
Series, with a new introduction by the author). There are several reasons for choosing Dream of Nation as a text for this
course.
1. Its
subject, the “dream of nation” in Quebec,
is central to themes of the course.
Mann recounts events, but her focus is on the intellectual and
identity aspects of Quebecois nationhood, that is, how opinion leaders and
the people at large thought of themselves.
The “French Fact” in Canadian history is essential to our course. Mann helps us take this seriously, as a
matter of ideas and values rather than just politics.
2. Mann
has a feminist take on events and ideas.
Within the general subject of how Quebecois nationhood evolved in Canada, she also traces how feminism evolved
in Quebec. This layered approach makes for a richer
narrative. At times her attempt to
establish a feminist perspective reveals the paucity of historical literature
on which to draw, but that is itself instructive as to the development of
historical scholarship as of the 1980s.
3. The
author writes for the benefit of English speakers. The book is the effort of an insider to
explain things to outsiders. Sometimes
the narrative is fairly dense, because the ideas are serious, but overall the
work is accessible, because that is the author’s intent.
In addition to being a distinguished scholar, Mann pursued
a career in university administration, culminating in the presidency of York University. Read
here about her receipt in 1997 of an honorary doctorate from the University of Montreal
for her “major contribution towards an improved understanding of the
intellectual and cultural history of Quebec”
and for being “especially innovative in introducing feminist concerns into a
general history of Quebec.” Earlier Mann served as president of the
Canadian Historical Association, and you can read
her presidential address here.
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Chapter
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Questions
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Prefaces
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Works of History are in a sense timeless, but they also
are creations of the historians’ particular places and times. What were the origins of this book?
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1. The Dream of Empire
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Why did this “dream of empire,” French empire in North America, not become a reality? What happened to it?
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2. Conquest
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After learning the facts of the British conquest,
address Mann’s main point: What is the significance of conquest to the
founding vision of Quebec?
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3. An Other’s Empire
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So, Britain
tried to make Quebec
an English colony, but, “It never quite worked.” Why not?
What happened instead?
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4. The Birth of Nationalism
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Nationalism was a worldwide phenomenon in the 19th
century. Who were the Nationalists
of Quebec? How did they engineer an
early sense of nation?
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5. For Whom the Bell
Tolls
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The bell tolled “the defeat of reform”—liberal political
reform. What did the Quebec reformers (or
rebels) want, and what did British policy propose in response?
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6. Alliance
for Survival
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To survive union with English Canada, French Canada
organized a cultural defense of itself.
How—through what institutions—was this expressed?
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7. The Confederation Risk
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Bleu and Rouge contended over whether to take the risk
of confederation. The Bleus
won. This sets up the big metaphor
on pp. 112-13 about how French and English might live together in Canada. Explain it.
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8. The Clerical Offensive
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Ultamontanism is the key term
here. What was it? What were its expressions?
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9. Nobody Meant to Stay
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Where were the French Canadians going? How did this change Quebec?
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10. The End of Empire
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What were the reasons for disillusionment and
destabilization in the late 19th century? How did the political balance shift to
reflect the change?
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11. The Twentieth Century Belongs to Quebec
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What forces and issues gave rise to Francohone
nationalism in Quebec
at the close of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th?
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12. Feminism, Nationalism, and the Clerical Offensive
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This is a key chapter for the incorporation of feminism
in Quebec
history, so—As Quebec shed its “agricultural skin”, what sorts of responses
to industrialization were proposed by feminists, nationalists, and priests?
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13. The Prussians Are Next Door
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Auto tags in Quebec
bear the legend, “Je me souviens.” This chapter is about historical
memory. What historical memory did politicians
of different stripes carry forward from the Great War?
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14. Abbe Groulx
Sounds the Alarm
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Who was Abbe Groulx? What did
he propose in order to ensure survival of “a distinctive French Canada”?
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15. The Search for Equilibrium
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How might stability be achieved in the face of the Great
Depression? What should women
do? What was the change of
government?
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16. Ottawa’s
War
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World War II overwhelmed nationalist conceptions of a
distinctive French Canada. What were
the main signs of this, the greatest threats to the Francophone order?
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17. Rally Round the Flag
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In the face of North American unity and the threats to nationalist
Quebec,
how might political leaders and the Roman Catholic church defend the
Francophone dream?
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18. Ici Radio-Canada
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How might Quebec
reap the benefits of progress—cease to be backward and insular—and at the
same time retain and vitalize Francophone culture? What role might popular media play in
this?
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19. Noisy Evolution
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How did the Quiet Revolution become noisy? With language politics and the rise of a “providential
state,” how did Francophone expectations in Quebec change and elevate?
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20. Feminism, Federalism, and the Independence
of Quebec
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Commenting on the referendum of 1980, Mann closes, “somewhere
in the confusion over feminism, federalism, and the independence of Quebec, Reve Levesque’s dream of nation dissipated.” How did these three competing ideals
complicate the dream?
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HIST 382
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