Ebook: The Catholic Origins of Quebec’s Quiet Revolution, 1931-1970
Author: Michael Gauvreau
- Tags: Church History, Churches & Church Leadership, History, Biblical History & Culture, Church History, Historical Theology, Canada, Americas, History, Province & Local, Canada, Americas, History, Christianity, Religious, World, History, General, Religious, World, History, History, Religious Studies, Religion & Spirituality, History, Africa, Ancient, Asia, Europe, Latin America, Middle East, Military, United States, Humanities, New Used & Rental Textbooks, Specialty Boutique, Christianity, Religious Studies, Humanities, New Used & Renta
- Series: Mcgill-Queen’s Studies in the History of Religion
- Year: 2005
- Publisher: McGill-Queen’s University Press
- Language: English
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The Catholic Origins of Quebec's Quiet Revolution challenges a versionof history central to modern Quebec's understanding of itself: that theQuiet Revolution began in the 1960s as a secular vision of state andsociety which rapidly displaced an obsolete, clericalized Catholicism.Michael Gauvreau argues that organizations such as Catholic youthmovements played a central role in formulating the Personalist Catholicideology that underlay the Quiet Revolution and that ordinaryQuebecers experienced the Quiet Revolution primarily through a seriesof transformations in the expression of their Catholic identity. In sodoing Gauvreau offers a new understanding of Catholicism's place intwentieth-century Quebec.
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