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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
201

« À quoi sert au Canadien-Français de gagner l'univers canadien s'il perd son âme de francophone? » Représentations identitaires et mémorielles dans la presse franco-ontarienne après la “rupture” du Canada français (1969-1986)

Miville, Serge January 2012 (has links)
Cette étude de la presse en Ontario français cherche à revenir sur le débat quant à rupture du Canada français et sur l’immense fragmentation identitaire qui se serait opérée dans les communautés francophones du pays en analysant les prises de position de journaux régionaux. La thèse relève d’importants vestiges du Canada français dans la mise en sens par les journaux des revendications franco-ontariennes, notamment en ce qui a trait à la question scolaire, aux langues officielles et au statut des minorités francophones du pays. Elle effectue aussi une tâche inédite jusqu’à présent : mettre en relation cinq hebdomadaires et un quotidien afin de mieux saisir la complexité idéologique qui caractérise le débat public franco-ontarien. L’étude montre aussi l’existence d’un comportement « nationalitaire » dans la presse qui, nourrie de la mémoire du Canada français, sert de pierre angulaire pour les revendications des Franco-Ontariens.
202

“I didn’t have time to find the English words”: The Korean War’s Role in the Evolution of Bilingualism in the Canadian Armed Forces

Labrosse, Julien January 2016 (has links)
This thesis explores the impact of the Korean War on the evolution of the role of the French language in the Canadian military between 1946 and 1954. It explains how the Korean War acted as both a catalyst for a more accommodating stance towards the French language in the Canadian Armed Forces, and an immediate impediment to the implementation of such changes. Particularly, this thesis explores the conflict that emerged between various officials in the Department of National Defence concerning the place that should be made for the French language, and how best to recruit more French Canadians. It shows that there was serious disagreement between the Minister of National Defence, Brooke Claxton, who wanted more bilingualism in the Canadian military, and the Chief of General Staff, General Guy G. Simonds, who resisted further concessions to francophones. Moreover, this thesis reveals the extent to which there was goodwill within the Canadian Armed Forces on the part of both anglophones and francophones on the frontline in Korea. This constituted the basis on which the Department of National Defence was able to begin the process of implementing a more bilingual system. In this respect, this thesis shows the Canadian military to have been ahead of the federal Civil Service.

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