The Reconquest Of Montreal: Language Policy and Social Change in a Bilingual City

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Temple University Press, Apr 28, 2010 - Political Science - 320 pages

Although Montreal has been a bilingual city since 1760 and demographically dominated by French-speakers for well over a century and a quarter, it was not until the late 1960s that full-fledged challenges to the city’s English character emerged. Since then. two decades of agitation over la question linguistique as well as the enactment of three language laws have altered the places of French and English in Montreal‘s schools, public administration, economy. and even commercial signs. In this book, Marc Levine examines the nature of this stunning transformation and, in particular, the role of public policy in promoting it.

The reconquest of Montreal by the French-speaking majority makes for interesting history. It includes episodes of intense conflict and occasional violence and tells the fascinating story of how an economically disadvantaged and culturally threatened linguistic community mobilized politically and used the state to redistribute group power in Canada’s second largest city. In addition, the history of Montreal’s language question offers analysts of urban politics and public policy an excellent case study of some of the central issues facing cities containing more than one major linguistic community.

After tracing the politicization of the language question in the 1960s and 1970s, Levine analyzes the impact of the three controversial language laws penacted by the Quebec provincial government between 1969 and 1977. Exhaustively researched, The Reconquest of Montreal is the definitive study of the most explosive issue in Quebec political life.



In the series Conflicts in Urban and Regional Development, edited by John R. Logan and Todd Swanstrom.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
An English City Montreal before the Quiet Revolution
7
The Quiet Revolution and the Politicization of Language
39
Linguistic Crises and Policy Responses 19671969
67
A Polarized City 19701976
87
Bill 101 and hte Politics of Language 19771989
111
Public Policy Language and the Montreal Economy 19601989
149
The Francisation of the Montreal Economy
177
English and French in the New Montreal
209
Notes
229
Index
275
Copyright

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About the author (2010)

Marc V. Levine is Associate Professor of History and Urban Affairs and Director of the Urban Studies Program at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.

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