*This article builds on papers given at Keele University at the Groupe de Recherche et d'Études sur le Canada Français (GRECF) and at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, both in February 2003. I am grateful to the Arts and Humanities Research Board (AHRB) for their financial support, and to Gérard Bouchard, Claude Verreault, Bill Marshall, Céline Gagnon, Will McMorran and the anonymous reviewers of Nations and Nationalism for their helpful comments on ideas raised herein. All translations from the French in this article are those of the author.
French: a language for everyone in Québec?†
Article first published online: 20 OCT 2004
DOI: 10.1111/j.1354-5078.2004.00181.x
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How to Cite
Oakes, L. (2004), French: a language for everyone in Québec?. Nations and Nationalism, 10: 539–558. doi: 10.1111/j.1354-5078.2004.00181.x
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Publication History
- Issue published online: 20 OCT 2004
- Article first published online: 20 OCT 2004
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Abstract. With the realisation that the future of French in Québec depends on its adoption by a growing number of immigrants, efforts have intensified in recent years to promote a less ethnic and more civic conception of Québécois identity. As attested by the title of the final report of the Commission des États généraux sur la situation et l'avenir de la langue française au Québec (French, a Language for Everyone), a key component of this new conception is the idea that French should be a langue publique commune (common public language) for all those residing in Québec, irrespective of ethnic origin. This article examines the notion of langue publique commune in more detail. While the concept assumes that language can somehow be ‘de-ethnicised’ to become the property of all ethnic groups, observations made in other contexts only confirm the inextricable link between language and the ethnic, as opposed to the civic, dimension of national identity. The article also investigates the issue of language motivation, in particular the related challenge faced by the Québécois authorities of how to encourage so-called new Quebecers to adopt French as their language of public communications.

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