Dictionary of Meaning
<<Back
Please select a letter:
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
F |
G |
H |
I |
J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
O |
P |
Q |
R |
S |
T |
U |
V |
W |
X |
Y |
Z |
0-9
Click here for Shopping
Quiet Revolution
*** Shopping-Tip: Quiet Revolution
Image:Lesage Johnson and Levesque.jpg right|thumb|250px|[[Jean Lesage,
Daniel Johnson Sr. and
René Lévesque, three prominent actors of the Quiet Revolution.]]
The '''Quiet Revolution''' (''Révolution tranquille'') was a period of rapid change in
Quebec,
Canada, in the 1960s.
Quebec's "Quiet Revolution" was characterized by:
* The rapid and effective
secularization of society;
* The creation of an ''État-Providence'' (
welfare state);
* A transformation of the national identity among Francophone Quebecers (from ''
French Canadian Canadien français'' to the term ''
Québécois'').
The changes were the result of many important transformations within Quebec society. Among those often cited are:
* Massive investments in the
public education system;
* Creation of a Ministry of Education;
*
trade union Unionization of the
civil service;
* Provincial government measures meant to increase Quebecers' control over the province's economy;
*
Nationalization of
electricity production and distribution.
Origins
There is no consensus as to when the Quiet Revolution began, except perhaps on the political level with the reforms enacted by the
Parti libéral du Quebec Liberal provincial government of
Jean Lesage who was elected in the
Quebec general election, 1960 1960 provincial election. Similarly, there is no consensus as to when the Quiet Revolution ended, but it is mostly agreed that it was before the
October Crisis of 1970.
Many events are said to have been precursors or at least signs of this impending revolution. Among them are the
Asbestos Strike Asbestos miners' strike of
1949, the
Maurice Richard riot of 1955, the signing of the ''Refus Global'' by
les Automatistes and the publication of ''
Les insolences du Frère Untel'' (the impertinences of Brother Somebody), which criticized the near absolute dominance of the
Roman Catholic Church in Quebec. The political journal ''
Cité Libre'' is also credited with being an intellectual forum for critics of the Duplessis regime.
From the late 1930s to 1959, the political, educational, economic and social spheres of Quebec were controlled by the fiercely conservative
Maurice Duplessis, leader of the ''
Union Nationale''. Since first settled as part of
New France, the Roman Catholic Church used entities such as the
Company of One Hundred Associates to keep control but under British rule, business maintained a powerful
lobby to protect the investments needed to keep Canada's economy on pace with the United States. Electoral fraud and corruption were commonplace in Quebec, with the Church openly campaigning for the Union Nationale with slogans such as ''Le ciel est bleu, l'enfer est rouge'' (Heaven is blue, hell is red - referring to the colours of the ''Union Nationale'' (blue) and the Liberals (red)). The Roman Catholic Church controlled the availability of books by maintaining an index of banned documents (the ''
Index Librorum Prohibitorum''). The Catholic Church controlled the French education institutions and hospitals. A legacy from this agreement is the
Duplessis Orphans.
Because of Canada's, and Quebec's, small population, capital for investment was, and still is, always in short supply. As such, the country and the province of Quebec's natural resources were developed by foreign investors willing to risk the investment needed. As an example, iron ore was explored for and its mining developed by the
United States-based
Iron Ore Company. Because of the agrarian, anti-business policies of the Roman Catholic Church and its
Seigneurial system of New France Seigneurial system that had been rigidly in place for centuries, it was British immigrants, notably the
Scots-Quebecers who invested and built the industrialized economy in Quebec, making it the foremost economic center in Canada and a major force in North America. However, the Roman Catholic Church led the rejection of an industrialization effort by former Premier
Louis-Alexandre Taschereau. Because of the failure of the ensuing Duplessis government of Quebec to promote business and to establish university business training for francophones to match the rest of Canada and the U.S., the income levels between rural French workers and those in the growing white collar sector began to widen at a time when Canada was looking to grow. The country followed the massive industrialization and technological innovations going on in the United States while trying to cope with the
Great Depression. Because the vast majority of French-Canadians chose not participate in business solutions, it increased the number of Canadians from other provinces of Canada willing to fill the void. Historians have referred to this period as the ''Grande noirceur'' (Great Darkness), but most will add that this period is often perceived as worse than it was.
In many ways, Maurice Duplessis's death in
1959, very soon followed by the sudden death of his successor
Paul Sauvé, served as a trigger for the Quiet Revolution, or rather it unleashed energies that had been held back by the Roman Catholic Church policies for decades. Within a year of Duplessis's death, the
Parti Libéral du Québec Liberal party was elected with
Jean Lesage at its head. The Liberals had campaigned under the very evocative slogans ''Maîtres chez nous'' (Masters of our own house) and ''Il faut que ça change'' (Things have to change).
Education
To achieve these goals the Lesage government bid largely on an accrued instruction of its population. The ''Commission Parent'' was established in
1961 to study the education system and to bring forth recommendations, which eventually led to the adoption of several reforms, the most important of which was the secularization of the education system. Although schools maintained their historical Catholic or Protestant characters, in practice they were secular institutions since the province was now in charge of the school programs. Other reforms included mandatory school attendance until the age of 16 and free instruction until the 11th grade.
In
1967,
CÉGEPs were created to offer post-secondary professional public education everywhere in the province. In
1968 the government created the
Université du Québec network to achieve similar goals for university-level education. Nevertheless, it would be almost twenty years later when quality business programs were put in place in Quebec's French-language universities that would equal those of universities elsewhere in North America.
Economic reforms
On the economic level, the government sought to increase francophones' control of the province's economic sphere, which, until then, had been largely dominated by English Canadian and American investors.
Seeking a mandate for its most daring reform, the nationalisation of the province's electric companies under
Hydro-Québec, the Liberal party called for
Quebec general election, 1962 new elections in 1962. The Liberal party was returned to power with an increased majority in the Quebec
National Assembly of Quebec and within 6 months,
René Lévesque, Minister of Natural Resources, enacted his plans for
Hydro-Québec.
More public institutions were created to follow through with the desire to increase the province's economic autonomy. The public companies SIDBEC (iron and steel), SOQUEM (mining), REXFOR (forestry) and SOQUIP (petroleum) were created to exploit the province's abundant natural resources. The ''Société générale de financement'' (General financing corporation) was created in
1962 to encourage Quebecers to invest in their economic future and to increase the profitability of small companies. In
1963, in conjunction with the
Canada Pension Plan the Government of Canada authorized the Province of Quebec to create its own ''Régie des Rentes du Québec'' (Quebec Pension Plan); universal contributions came into effect in 1966. To manage the considerable revenues generated by the RRQ, and to provide the capital necessary for various projects in the public and private sectors, the ''
Caisse de dépôt et de placement'' was created in 1965.
A new Labour Code (''Code du Travail'') was adopted in
1964. It made unionising much easier and gave public employees the right to strike. It was during the same year that the ''
Civil Code of Quebec Code Civil'' (Civil Code) was modified to recognise the legal equality of spouses. In case of divorce, the rules for administering the
Divorce Act of Canada were retained using Quebec's old
Community property matrimonial regime until 1980 when the new legislation brought an automatic equal division of certain basic family assets between the spouses. Prior to this modification of marriage laws, married women in Quebec could not perform financial transactions and other legal duties without their husband's signature.
{{fact}}
Nationalism
The heightened sense of national capacity and identity provided by the multiple reforms resulted in the transformation of the nationalist discourse of Quebec, stemming from political deadlocks between the governments of Quebec and
Ottawa since as far as
1867. It is during the Quiet Revolution that the ''Canadien(ne)s-français(es)'' (French Canadians) became ''Québécois(es)'', thus marking a distinct evolution from passive nationalism to a more active pursuit of political autonomy. For some, this could be achieved through a reform of the
British North America Act, while for sovereignists, the BNAA was considered a null and void act passed by an imperialist foreign power.
In the
Quebec general election, 1966 1966 election, a post-Duplessis ''Union Nationale'' party ridiculed the rapid changes made by the Liberal government and promised reforms if returned to power under leader
Daniel Johnson Sr.. While visiting Montreal for
Expo 67, General
Charles de Gaulle proclaimed ''
Vive le Québec libre!'' in
Vive le Québec libre speech his speech at Montreal City Hall, which gave the
Quebec sovereigntism Quebec independence movement further impetus. Though the Union Nationale lost the popular vote, they captured a 6-seat majority government. In 1968, the
Quebec sovereigntism sovereignist ''
Parti Québécois'' was created with
René Lévesque as its leader.
External links
-
Jean Lesage and the Quiet Revolution, 1960-1966
-
The Quiet Revolution
Important figures
*
Jean Lesage
*
René Lévesque
*
Paul Gérin-Lajoie
*
Thérèse Casgrain
*
Pierre Bourgault
*
Michel Chartrand
See also
*
État québécois
*
Quebec general election, 1960
*
Quebec general election, 1962
*
Timeline of Quebec history
*
Quebec politics
Category:History of Catholicism in Quebec
Category:History of Quebec
fr:Révolution tranquille
*** Shopping-Tip: Quiet Revolution