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Fabrizio's passion is the portrait of a young man, Fabrizio Notte, in search of himself as an individual and as an artist. Raised in a traditional Italian family in a multilingual and multicultural North American city, Fabrizio struggles to find harmony between his heritage and his everyday Canadian reality.
The Catholic Origins of Quebec's Quiet Revolution challenges a version of history central to modern Quebec's understanding of itself: that the Quiet Revolution began in the 1960s as a secular vision of state and society which rapidly displaced an obsolete, clericalized Catholicism. Michael Gauvreau argues that organizations such as Catholic youth movements played a central role in formulating the Catholic ideology underlying the Quiet Revolution and that ordinary Quebecers experienced the Quiet Revolution primarily through a series of transformations in the expression of their Catholic identity. Providing a new understanding of Catholicism's place in twentieth-century Quebec, Gauvreau reveals that Catholicism was not only increasingly dominated by the priorities of laypeople but was also the central force in Quebec's cultural transformation.. He makes it clear that from the 1930s to the 1960s the Church espoused a particularly radical understanding of modernity, especially in the areas of youth, gender identities, marriage, and family.
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L'historien Michael Gauvreau montre qu'une partie des changements sociopolitiques survenus au cours des années 1960 sont imputables à l'action de mouvements catholiques.