The Quiet Revolution is the name given to a period of Quebec history extending from 1960 to 1966 and corresponding to the tenure of office of the Liberal Party of Jean Lesage. The term appears to have been coined by a Toronto journalist who, upon witnessing the many and far reaching changes taking place in Quebec, declared that what was happening was nothing short of a revolution, albeit a quiet one.
Read more at the link below
2007-02-15 06:16:24
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answer #1
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answered by the_lipsiot 7
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The Quiet Revolution (Révolution tranquille) was the 1960s period of rapid change in Quebec, Canada.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiet_Revolution
Good luck with your homework
2007-02-15 14:13:53
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Wouldn't it be easier for you to write "Quite Revolution" in a goggle search. Or do you want me to write the essay for you. Which I'm willing to do for a nominal fee.
2007-02-15 14:15:14
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answer #3
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answered by Ron P 3
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Honestly, all I knew that was it happened in Canada. I did a search and found this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiet_Revolution
Hope it helps you out!
2007-02-15 14:14:37
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answer #4
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answered by polishedamethyst 6
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The Quiet Revolution is the name given to a period of Quebec history extending from 1960 to 1966 and corresponding to the tenure of office of the Liberal Party of Jean Lesage.There is no consensus as to when the Quiet Revolution began, except perhaps on the political level with the reforms enacted by the Liberal provincial government of Jean Lesage who was elected in the 1960 provincial election. Similarly, there is no consensus as to when the Quiet Revolution ended, but it is mostly agreed that it was before the October Crisis of 1970.
Many events are said to have been precursors or at least signs of this impending revolution. Among them are the Asbestos miners' strike of 1949, the Maurice Richard Riot of 1955, the signing of the Refus Global by les Automatistes and the publication of Les insolences du Frère Untel (the impertinences of Brother Somebody/Whatshisname), which criticized the near absolute dominance of the Roman Catholic Church in Quebec. The political journal Cité Libre is also credited with being an intellectual forum for critics of the Duplessis regime.
Economic and social spheres of Quebec were controlled by the fiercely conservative Maurice Duplessis, leader of the Union Nationale. Since first settled as part of New France, the Roman Catholic Church used entities such as the Company of 100 Associates to keep control but under British rule, business maintained a powerful lobby to protect the investments needed to keep Canada's economy on pace with the U.S. Electoral fraud and corruption were commonplace in Quebec, with the Church openly campaigning for the Union Nationale with slogans such as Le ciel est bleu, l'enfer est rouge (Heaven is blue, hell is red — referring to the colours of the Union Nationale (blue) and the Liberals (red)). The Catholic Church controlled the availability of books by maintaining an index of banned documents (the Index Librorum Prohibitorum). The Church also controlled the French education institutions and hospitals. A legacy from this agreement is the Duplessis Orphans.
Because of Canada's, and Quebec's, small population, capital for investment was, and still is, always in short supply. As such, the country and the province of Quebec's natural resources were developed by foreign investors willing to risk the investment needed. As an example, iron ore was explored for and its mining developed by the U.S.-based Iron Ore Company. Because of the agrarian, anti-business policies of the Catholic Church and its Seigneurial system that had been rigidly in place for centuries, it was British immigrants, notably the Scots-Quebecers who invested and built the industrialized economy in Quebec, making it the foremost economic center in Canada and a major force in North America. However, the Roman Catholic Church led the rejection of an industrialization effort by former Premier Louis-Alexandre Taschereau. Because of the failure of the ensuing Duplessis government of Quebec to promote business and to establish university business training for francophones to match the rest of Canada and the U.S., the income levels between rural French workers and those in the growing white collar sector began to widen at a time when Canada was looking to grow. The country followed the massive industrialization and technological innovations going on in the U.S. while trying to cope with the Great Depression. Thus, because the vast majority of French-Canadians could not participate in business solutions, it increased the number of Canadians from other provinces of Canada willing to fill the void. Historians have referred to this period as the Grande noirceur (Great Darkness), but most will add that this period is often described and perceived much worse than it actually was.
In many ways, Maurice Duplessis's death in 1959, very soon followed by the sudden death of his successor Paul Sauvé, served as a trigger for the Quiet Revolution, or rather it unleashed energies that had been held back by the Roman Catholic Church policies for decades. Within a year of Duplessis's death, the Liberal party was elected with Jean Lesage at its head. The Liberals had campaigned under the very evocative slogans Maîtres chez nous (Masters of our own house) and Il faut que ça change (Things have to change).
2007-02-15 14:18:58
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answer #5
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answered by Child of God 5
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It was a period of change in Quebec, Canada. You can learn more about it at the link below.
2007-02-15 14:14:17
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answer #6
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answered by caring_funlovingteacher 4
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiet_Revolution
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2007-02-15 14:14:47
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answer #7
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answered by leavemealonestalker 6
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try this website...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quiet_Revolution
2007-02-15 14:15:06
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answer #8
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answered by angelbabytrc07 2
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