Irish studies flourish in Quebec

Concordia’s new area studies course is the only one of its kind in Canada

by Josh Dehaas on Tuesday, August 16, 2011 12:20pm - 3 Comments
In vogue: Irish studies

THE CANADIAN PRESS/Graham Hughes

Only a tenth of Canada’s 4.4 million Canadians of Irish ancestry call Quebec home. And yet, it’s the epicentre of research on the Emerald Isle.

Concordia University’s School of Canadian Irish Studies—the only one of its kind in Canada—will have more than 700 students enrolled this fall, studying everything from the Great Famine to James Joyce. The first ever bachelor of arts in Canadian Irish studies will begin in January. “The success of Irish studies at Concordia is quite striking,” says Will Straw, director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, “particularly since these kinds of ‘area’ studies programs are having difficulty in other universities.”

Interest in Ireland is especially high in Quebec, says Michael Kenneally, principal of the Concordia school. “Here in Quebec, if you’re interested in cultural nationalism, colonialism, post-imperial identities, partition and decolonization, rebellion and independence, Ireland is a case study for all of that.” And, he adds, “preserving the Irish language has a lot of resonance in Quebec.”

And, it seems, for the government of Jean Charest, who claims Irish ancestry through his late mother; it gave $2.5 mill­ion to the Canadian Irish Studies Foundation, which gives all of its money to Concordia. Brian Gallery, former Westmount mayor, helped add nearly $7 million to the foundation’s pot of gold.

While no one knows why exactly La Belle Province is so enthusiastic about Ireland, surely their shared history tells part of the story. Both Quebec and Ireland have had secession movements, a history of Catholic-Protestant tensions, and share the same former colonial master.

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  • Anonymous

    “Only a tenth of Canada’s 4.4 million Canadians of Irish ancestry call Quebec home.” We are about 7 millions in Quebec. According to the Irish Society of Montreal, like Jean Charest, more than 40% Quebecers have Irish ancestry. A lot of people have Irish names (Murray, Kelly) or Irish French twisted names (Sylvain for Sullivan, Yelle for O’Neil, Guay for McGee, Belley for Baily, etc.) It is more than a tenth of 4.4 millions. From Gaspe to Montreal, in a lot of places near the St-Laurent, most people above 60 drink a lot of semi-boiled orange pekoe tea and like their beer lukewarm, most families carry old recipes for top-of-the stove cakes and puddings, and eveybody like a good stew or a cabbage soup with baking soda bread. A lot of them speak French now, because they married with catholic French Canadians – though many still use English (Gaspe, Montreal, Quebec City) – but their culture is still lively. Remember the Olympic Games, how did they picture Quebec? A lumberjack with a fiddle, or something like that? To the journalist: do some research next time, please!

  • Rick Smith

    Of course the irish can flourish anywhere, it’s the Quebecois that can’t seem to flourish anyway except in their own country – Quebec.  c’est la vie eh ?
    :)

  • Rick Smith

    Of course the irish can flourish anywhere, it’s the Quebecois that can’t seem to flourish anyway except in their own country – Quebec.  c’est la vie eh ?
    :)

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