Title: Montreal in Historical Perspectives No
1Montreal in Historical PerspectivesNo
Political Movement in the Context of Human
Communication
"I don't like this city Montreal. You can't
throw a stone without breaking a church window"
(Mark Twain qut in 57)
-
- The Battle of Quebec 1756-1763
2Outline
- History
- Major Dates
- the Quebec separatist movement
- Features Two solitudes and St. Laurence Blvd.
- 1970s (? 1980) Robert Lepage
- No Introduction and FLQ
- No (1998) Analysis
-
3History Dates
Source
1608 -- Quebec city founded
1608 -- ????????????????????
1763 -- The Seven Years' War ends with the signing of the Treaty of Paris, which allows Anglophones to take over New France. ? orphan mentality
1763???????????????
1840English is the official language even in Quebec, where the majority (60) speaks French
1840????????????,?????????????????
1917?There are riots in Quebec as the federal government enforces conscription. 1917 ???????????,???????????
1948??????? Adoption of a new Flag of Quebec.
4the Quebec separatist movement
1960 The beginning of a period of sustained change known as the Quiet Revolution, which terminated the churchs domination.
1960 ??????????????(Quiet Revolution),???????????,???????????
1967 Visiting President of France Charles de Gaulle shouts "Vive le Québec libre!" from the balcony of Montreal city hall.
1967 ?????????????,???????????(vivre le Quebec libre),??????????????
1968 On October 26, the Parti Québécois is created.
1968 ??????,??????????????????
Source
- ?????????????????,?????????????????
- 1969 --Two official languages
5the Quebec separatist movement
Source
1970 ????????(October Crisis),?????????(FLQ)?? ???????,?????????(Trudeau)??????,??????????????
1970 October Crisis Terrorist activities by the Front de libération du Québec culminated with the abduction of James Cross, the British Trade Commissioner to Canada, and Pierre Laporte, a provincial minister and Vice-Premier. Martial law is declared and civil rights are suspended
6Referendum
Source http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Q
uebec_history_(1960_to_1981)
1976 the Parti Québécois (PQ) is elected. With a participation rate of 85.27, the highest in Quebec's history, 41 of voters give 71 seats to the PQ.
1976 ??????????,????,???????????Â
1980 -- Referendum (59 said NO)
1980 -- first referendum,????????????????
1990 The Meech Lake Accord (which recognizes Quebec as a Distinct Society) collapses as it fails to win unanimous ratification by the deadline. Support for Quebec sovereignty rises to high levels.
1990 ???????????????(Distinct Society)??????(Meech Lake Accord)??,?????????????
7- 1995 2nd referendum (??/No??/Yes50.5849.42)
- 2011 -- Léger Marketing and pro-sovereignist
newspaper Le Devoir conducted a poll on the
question. Â Yes 41. - In 2011, the sovereignist movement splintered,
(source)
8Language Policy
Source http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Q
uebec_history_(1960_to_1981)
1974 "Bill 22" --Official Language Act (Quebec) language legislation (later superseded by Bill 101).
1974 ?????????????
1977 Act 178 -- All French in store signs.
1977 178 Act ???????????????
9No Background FLQ Front de Liberation du
Québéc
- Formed in the wake of Quiet Revolution in 1960s.
- While the majority of nationalists chose the
democratic path of René Lévesques Parti
Québécois, at the fringes more militant groups
like the FLQ emerged. The FLQs campaign of
bombings and robberies culminated in the
kidnappings in 1970. . . - Influence on literature In 1963, shortly after
the first wave of FLQ bombings, a group of
francophone writers in their twenties founded . .
.Parti pris, advocating a sovereign and
socialist Quebec.
10October Crisis in 1970
- soldier stands guard at Parliament Hill in Ottawa
as security was stepped up because of terrorist
kidnappings in Montreal during the FLQ crisis.
Oct. 13, 1970.
- Oct. 5, 1970 -- kidnapped James Cross, the
British trade commissioner - Oct 10 kidnapped Quebec cabinet minister
Pierre Laporte and killed him on the 17th.
11October Crisis in 1970
- Trudeau invoked War Measure Act.
- By noon of Oct 16, police officers arrested more
than 450 people suspected of being FLQ members,
even friends of FLQ members. e.g.Sophie - Cross stayed alive, in return his kidnappers got
safe passage to Cuba.
12Nos Background (2)The Seven Streams of River
Ota and No
- No -- the characters taken from Act 5, in which
Sophie has an affair with Walter. - Seven Streams has as its historical contexts
- the second World War (concentration camps and
Hiroshima) - Madame Butterfly, and
- 1970 Osaka Expo, while No just used FLQ terrorism
and Expo.
13No by Robert Lepage National and Personal
Choices
- Set on an International Stage
- Yes or no
- to separatism, to abortion, to obsession
14Robert Lepage
- born in Quebec City, Quebec, December 12, 1957.
An actor, director of plays and films. - Characteristics
- Style auteur but not author -- his
bilingualism, his explorations into multimedia,
use of theatrical space and impromptu acting, - Issues interculturalism and the nature of
language (No), memory, guilt, father-son
relationship, brotherhood, double identity, the
act of creation itself. (source). - e.g. The Seven Faces of Robert Lepage 1. acting
writing 1000 Vinci 1250
15Robert Lepage Works
- Films
- Possible Worlds (2000)
- No (1998)
- Polygraphe, Le (1996)
- Confessionnal, Le (1995)
- Starring in Stardom (2000) Montreal vu par...
(1991) Jesus de Montreal (1989)
Plays Vinci, Hamlet, the Dragon Trilogy, and
The Seven Streams of River Ota (1994).
16Robert Lepage existential concerns
- Le Confessional --the question "Where do I come
from?" - Le Polygraphe -- to examine "What is truth?"
- No -- to contemplate "Where am I going?"
- Possible Worlds -- to discover What my real
world is?" (Dundjerovic source)
17Robert Lepage on Independence Issue
- Sympathetic and critical e.g. FLQ idealist but
comical (the insistence on correcting the
language. To set off a bomb or to advance a
cause) ? more discussion of Michel later - Unlike most Quebecois artists, Lepage looks at
Quebecois issues from a broadercross-cultural--
perspective. e.g. The Confessional and No.
E.g. Pierre and the translators the ones to
link the East and the West.
18the East as mirror
- My fascination with the East also helps me to
understand the West. For many years now, the
former has helped me understand the latter. How
can you understand the West, the culture of the
twentieth century, when you're a Quebecer with
virtually no cultural means at your disposal to
interpret the world? You need a mirror, and one
of my first mirrors was the East. In Seven
Streams, mirrors are pervasive. They help to
funnel Jana Capek's memory, bringing her back to
Theresienstadt, the Czech concentration camp. We
also have the reverse, the complete lack of
mirrors in the life of a hibakusha Nozomi. . .
Charest 36
19Examples of Interculturalism and Multiple
Language in No
- Double-plot (French play within the film)
- Sound track crosses over to the next scene (e.g.
end of the invitation scene 3000-) and the other
scenes (restaurant) images overlapping
(beginning and 500) - multiple language the translators scene
translator traitor - ? Coexistence,
- ? (mis)understanding
- (tower of Babel)
- Broader perspective or
- Solution of conflicts?
20The Role of No play?
- (As a contrast to the French farce) Tradition and
self-composure - Duality in communication the use of
lip-synching, mask and ritual - intercultural communication and life as
performance,
21No Major Issues
- Personal Conflicts and Survival Characters with
(or without) Emotional Problems - National Conflicts FLQ movement
- Cultural Issues
- the Use of Symbols
22No the Characters in Osaka
- The Canadian characters in Osaka
- What is Sophies problem and how is she looked at
by Walter and Patricia? - How do Sophie and Patricia express their
antagonism to each other? (3900-) - How about François-Xavier?
- How are Hanako and her translator friend Harold
set as a contrast to her Canadian friends?
(Hanako as an ibakusha) - How do the Canadian expatriates in Osaka view
themselves and Quebecois separatism? (106)
23Re. to discussionSophie in and out of the play
- In the play, a whore is able to finds ways out of
her dilemma - In her world, she is caught up in the
complicated relations and faced with the
difficult decision of whether to have an abortion
or not.
Bumps her head
24No the Characters in Osaka and Mirror/Photo
- Obsession (François-Xavier), fantasy (Walter),
peeping (Patricia), - harmony (Harold and Hanako)
25No the Characters in Osaka and Mirror/Photo
- Fantasy? orientalism (stereotyping the East)
- mirror image reflects the narrow-mindedness of
the twins as a kind of Canadian dual identity.
26Hanako and Harold
- Hanako blind and perceptive helpful to Sophie,
understanding and sensitive - 2. Harold does not worry about the hereditary
possibility of atomic radiation
27No the Characters in Montreal
- In Montreal the officers and FLQ members
- How is Michel different from his comrades? Why
does he insist on revising the communiqué? - And the investigators?
- Central symbols and themes --
- 3. Why are the clocks and phone booths important?
- 4. The plays within the play?
28No on Quebecois Separatism
- No puts FLQs faulty idealism in the context of
the problems in human communication and the issue
of survival. - both critical of and sympathetic with Quebecois
nationalism.
29No on Quebecois Separatism
- The terrorists
- trivial concern (about routeswhich routes allow
left turns Guy street is fine.), ones romantic
involvement with Sophie (betrayal of his friend),
mis-calculation of time? - destruction(juxtaposed with François-Xaviers
self-destructitve acts in the phone booth).
30Michel a writer
- hasnt written anything for three years
idealistic and unrealistic (refuses to write for
Radio Canada) - Reasons phrases not well-formulated,
confusing, not French. - Gaps in his communication with Sophie.
- failure to understand
- Bad timing in calling each other
31Government Officers Trivial, Comic (seen as a
gay couple) and Incompetent
32Symbols Clock ? bad timing
1. bad-timing ? miscommunication between Michel
and Sophie (5300 ) Patricias discover of the
affair
- 2. wrong calculation
- using the wrong clock (Tokyo time) to set the
bomb, - Since there is a 14 hour differenceor 2 hour
difference on the clock face, the bomb is set 2
hours earlier.
33the plays within the film
- No play Feydeaus domestic farce
34No and Farce
- Farce superficial patriotism, lack of blood
lineage, an example of colonialism and
superficial culture (Sophie 4400) - The Japanese play// Hanako about a woman who
finds her way back to life thanks to her hero
lover. - (vs. Sophie gets no help ? one of the innocent
victims)
35The Endings
36Endings
- Immediate consequence miscarriage and possible
sexual harassment - 10 years later the couple is older, richer,
calmer and probably more indifferent - Common project birthing
- They are less concerned with national issues,
but they survive.