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Québec et la géographie sociale en questions.

Authors :
VILLENEUVE, PAUL
Source :
Canadian Geographer. Spring2009, Vol. 53 Issue 1, p4-23. 20p. 2 Charts.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

In the early 1960s, two revolutions were underway: the quiet revolution in Québec and the quantitative revolution in geography. Apparently unrelated, these episodes of change probably shared common underlying values associated with modernity. Since then, the transformations experienced in Québec have been interpreted in a multitude of ways, including geographical considerations. Research careers, mine included, have been shaped by this undertaking. All along, I have found that social geography, with the capacity it has to reinvent itself, has helped making sense of this turbulent environment. In the 1970s, exploring the structural dynamics of Canada's social space helped in figuring out the place occupied by Québec in this ensemble. Then, analyzing the historical relationships between cosmopolitan Montréal and provincial Québec City suggested that the oxymoron ‘quiet revolution’ stood for a central process in the cultural dynamics of Québec's social space, where new ideas arriving through Montréal are sifted and institutionalized by the state in Québec City. Nevertheless, Québec City is also capable of initiating progressive urban movements, as illustrated by the odyssey of the documented through participant observation. Such urban movements may affect the urban fabric but, as intense and creative social networks, they may affect even more their interacting members, as it seems to have been the case with regard to rapidly evolving gender relations during the last decades. All in all, after more than four decades, I keep the conviction that a practice of social geography that is open to various theories and methods is capable of producing liberating knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00083658
Volume :
53
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Canadian Geographer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36657963
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1541-0064.2009.00234.x