Abstract
A Nation Beyond Borders: Lionel Groulx on French-Canadian Minorities by Michel Bock. Trans. Ferdinanda Van Gennip. Ottawa, Ontario: University of Ottawa Press, 2014. 277pp.
Highlights
Engaged Scholar Journal: Community-Engaged Research, Teaching and Learning supporting francophone minorities across Canada and in the United States
While Groulx was increasingly criticized by federalists as a supporter of Quebec separatism, on the one hand, in later years he expressed his apprehension over the development of Quebec separatism during the Quiet Revolution concomitant with a new emphasis on modernization through industrialization, educational reform, and especially an increasing anti-clericalism which undermined his prophetic view of French-Canadian destiny
Groulx believed that francophone minorities were an important extension of French Canada. His very traditionalistic nationalism emphasized the destiny and mission of all of French Canada, not just Quebec, so he devoted much of his energy and time to visiting and Engaged Scholar Journal: Community-Engaged Research, Teaching and Learning supporting francophone minorities across Canada and in the United States
Summary
Engaged Scholar Journal: Community-Engaged Research, Teaching and Learning supporting francophone minorities across Canada and in the United States. A Nation Beyond Borders: Lionel Groulx on French-Canadian Minorities by Michel Bock.
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