Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle

A group's collective identity is a complex phenomenon which is always difficult to delineate and understand, but however one does so, historical antecedents must be a crucial element. This year's "Presidential Address" explores this important question, which was raised in an earl...

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Published in:Historical Papers
Main Author: Wallot, Jean-Pierre
Format: Text
Language:French
Published: The Canadian Historical Association/La Société historique du Canada 1983
Subjects:
Online Access:http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/030897ar
https://doi.org/10.7202/030897ar
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spelling fterudit:oai:erudit.org:030897ar 2023-05-15T17:33:16+02:00 Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle Wallot, Jean-Pierre 1983 http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/030897ar https://doi.org/10.7202/030897ar fr fre The Canadian Historical Association/La Société historique du Canada Érudit Historical Papers vol. 18 no. 1 (1983) All rights reserved © The Canadian Historical Association/La Société historique du Canada, 1986 text 1983 fterudit https://doi.org/10.7202/030897ar 2013-03-29T13:14:57Z A group's collective identity is a complex phenomenon which is always difficult to delineate and understand, but however one does so, historical antecedents must be a crucial element. This year's "Presidential Address" explores this important question, which was raised in an earlier presidential discourse. On that occasion, Robert Craig Brown noted that "historical knowledge is an essential component of a nation's sense of cultural identity. ' ' Professor Wallot elucidates this theme: without a concept of what you have been, you cannot know who you are, or what you can be. As one of the characters in Joy Kogama's novel Obasan observes, "you are your history. If you cut off any of it, you're an amputee. ' 'Professor Wallot sets out to explore this problem by examining the Lower Canadian identity between roughly 1780 and 1815, in order to place the colony within the context of the culture of the North Atlantic world. Though Quebec/Lower Canada has often been portrayed as a closed society, relatively homogenous in its attitudes, cut off from its intellectual roots, and somewhat unsympathetic to new ideas, study of aspects of its culture suggest otherwise. The colony had access to contemporary international thought, in all of its variety, and was more than a passive observer in the clash of ideas and the rhythms of cultural change then current in Europe. In arriving at these conclusions, the author presents a two-part defence; in the first part of his paper, he examines the means of cultural diffusion, the role of printed materials in the formation of attitudes and the rapidity with which European ideas were transferred to Quebec. He concludes that, when one removes the time required to transmit these ideas, the colony was aware of, and deeply involved in, the intellectual cross-currents of the North Atlantic world.The author then proceeds to test the validity of this point by examining three quite different aspects of public culture: the discussion aroused by the fear of overpopulation and consequent impoverishment; the banking system and money, and finally, parliamentary theory and practice. In each of these fields, Professor Wallot concludes, the colony's cultural élite, at the very least, was aware of, and responsive to, recent European thought. In a society which boasted nearly universal literacy, this conclusion suggests a culture far more up-to-date than previous work would lead us to expect. Text North Atlantic Érudit.org (Université Montréal) Canada Historical Papers 18 1 1 29
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language French
description A group's collective identity is a complex phenomenon which is always difficult to delineate and understand, but however one does so, historical antecedents must be a crucial element. This year's "Presidential Address" explores this important question, which was raised in an earlier presidential discourse. On that occasion, Robert Craig Brown noted that "historical knowledge is an essential component of a nation's sense of cultural identity. ' ' Professor Wallot elucidates this theme: without a concept of what you have been, you cannot know who you are, or what you can be. As one of the characters in Joy Kogama's novel Obasan observes, "you are your history. If you cut off any of it, you're an amputee. ' 'Professor Wallot sets out to explore this problem by examining the Lower Canadian identity between roughly 1780 and 1815, in order to place the colony within the context of the culture of the North Atlantic world. Though Quebec/Lower Canada has often been portrayed as a closed society, relatively homogenous in its attitudes, cut off from its intellectual roots, and somewhat unsympathetic to new ideas, study of aspects of its culture suggest otherwise. The colony had access to contemporary international thought, in all of its variety, and was more than a passive observer in the clash of ideas and the rhythms of cultural change then current in Europe. In arriving at these conclusions, the author presents a two-part defence; in the first part of his paper, he examines the means of cultural diffusion, the role of printed materials in the formation of attitudes and the rapidity with which European ideas were transferred to Quebec. He concludes that, when one removes the time required to transmit these ideas, the colony was aware of, and deeply involved in, the intellectual cross-currents of the North Atlantic world.The author then proceeds to test the validity of this point by examining three quite different aspects of public culture: the discussion aroused by the fear of overpopulation and consequent impoverishment; the banking system and money, and finally, parliamentary theory and practice. In each of these fields, Professor Wallot concludes, the colony's cultural élite, at the very least, was aware of, and responsive to, recent European thought. In a society which boasted nearly universal literacy, this conclusion suggests a culture far more up-to-date than previous work would lead us to expect.
format Text
author Wallot, Jean-Pierre
spellingShingle Wallot, Jean-Pierre
Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle
author_facet Wallot, Jean-Pierre
author_sort Wallot, Jean-Pierre
title Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle
title_short Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle
title_full Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle
title_fullStr Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle
title_full_unstemmed Discours du président : Frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : Des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du XIXe siècle
title_sort discours du président : frontière ou fragment du système atlantique : des idées étrangères dans l’identité bas‑canadienne au début du xixe siècle
publisher The Canadian Historical Association/La Société historique du Canada
publishDate 1983
url http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/030897ar
https://doi.org/10.7202/030897ar
geographic Canada
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genre North Atlantic
genre_facet North Atlantic
op_relation Historical Papers
vol. 18 no. 1 (1983)
op_rights All rights reserved © The Canadian Historical Association/La Société historique du Canada, 1986
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7202/030897ar
container_title Historical Papers
container_volume 18
container_issue 1
container_start_page 1
op_container_end_page 29
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