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  1. Jul 21, 2015 · L’Action française proposed to the French Canadian nation the ideal of a sovereign French state, “la Laurentie” (Laurentia), in which national identity and political citizenship would coincide. All economic, social, cultural and political ideas converged toward this essential affirmation of national existence, called “integral ...

  2. Oct 6, 2021 · The date was July 24 th, 1967 and with those four words French president Charles de Gaulle announced to a frenzied Montréal crowd his support for a nationalist movement with seedlings of support. By the end of his controversial speech however the movement for a “free” Quebec would no longer be small in scale; it would become a political ...

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  4. French-Canadians whose suspicion of Britains international agenda combined with a North America-centric view of Canada articulated a nationaliste perspective. The leading figures in these two movements were men of letters, respectively: the humourist Stephen Leacock and the journalist Henri Bourassa.

  5. Kathleen Kellett-Betsos. Canadian literature - Quiet Revolution, French-Canadian, Multiculturalism: During the 1960s Quebec society underwent the greatest upheaval of its history. A new Liberal government set about modernizing the province, revamping the educational system, and creating a powerful Ministry of Cultural Affairs.

  6. The Identitarian movement or Identitarianism is a pan-European nationalist, ethno-nationalist, [3] [4] [5] far-right [6] [7] [5] political ideology asserting the right of the European ethnic groups and white peoples to Western culture and territories exclusively. Originating in France as Les Identitaires ("The Identitarians"), with its youth ...

  7. The Canadian Government had asked all Canadian print and broadcast organizations to refrain from reporting any manifestoes or other statements from the FLQ. I happened to know that a radio station in northern New Hampshire or Vermont broadcast programs in French to the large French Canadian populations in those two states, and to the Québcois ...

  8. English-Canadians with strong loyalties to the British Empire and aspirations for a larger Canadian role in world affairs became known as imperialists. French-Canadians whose suspicion of Britain’s international agenda combined with a North America-centric view of Canada articulated a nationaliste perspective.

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