Les représentations des Premiers Peuples et le colonialisme d’occupation dans les manuels scolaires d’histoire (1920-1960)

Type de ressource
Thèse
Auteurs/contributeurs
Titre
Les représentations des Premiers Peuples et le colonialisme d’occupation dans les manuels scolaires d’histoire (1920-1960)
Résumé
My master’s thesis examines the representations of First Peoples in French-language history textbooks produced and used in Quebec between 1920 and 1960, with a particular focus on those intended for elementary school children. This research is at the crossroads of studies on Quebec colonialism, childhood history and the study of representations. Several theories emanating from visual studies, othering and performance studies are also mobilized in my study of history textbooks. By positioning itself at the intersection of this mosaic of historiographies and conceptual approaches, my master’s thesis answers the following questions: how are the First Peoples in Canada represented in French-language history textbooks produced between the 1920s and the 1960s and to what extent are these representations at odds with the previous period? How are these representations mobilized in the Quebec colonial imagination? How is the colonial image of the ‘imaginary Indian’ received, appropriated and performed by children? My study contributes to a historiography exploring history of representations of the First Peoples in history textbooks since the beginning of public education in Quebec. The first chapter explores three historiographical fields on which my dissertation draws: children's history, settler colonialism, and representations of First Peoples in North American popular culture. Chapters two and three are devoted, in order, to the analysis of history textbooks produced between 1920 and 1950 and those between 1950 and 1960. I show that the figure of the Indian is mobilized by the authors of the first period’s textbooks to justify the dispossession and colonial violence of the past, notably through the use of political, moral and genealogical arguments. In the latter period’s, more nationalistic series of textbooks, the authors reiterate these same ideas, but with a stronger emphasis on the idea of the ‘civilizing mission’ to the point of cleansing the Quebec historical narrative of its original violence. Furthermore, I argue that these textbooks show the continuation of colonialism in the present. First Peoples no longer disappear from the narrative after the Conquest, as was the case in history textbooks before 1950, but they are still subject to a colonial discourse that denigrates and invisibilizes them, while attempting to justify the dispossession of their lands.
Type
Mémoire de maîtrise (M.A.)
Université
Université de Montréal
Lieu
Montréal
Date
2022-10-26
Langue
Français
Référence
Gaudreault, Benoit. « Les représentations des Premiers Peuples et le colonialisme d’occupation dans les manuels scolaires d’histoire (1920-1960) ». Mémoire de maîtrise (M.A.), Université de Montréal, 2022. https://hdl.handle.net/1866/27465.
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Thèses et mémoires