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dc.contributor.authorDupuis, Gilles
dc.date.accessioned2016-11-10T18:11:03Z
dc.date.available2016-11-10T18:11:03Z
dc.date.issued2010
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1866/16173
dc.subjectAquin, Hubertfr
dc.subjectFrench Canadian Literaturefr
dc.subjectQuebecfr
dc.subjectMemoryfr
dc.subjectHistoryfr
dc.subjectAnarnnesisfr
dc.subjectAnamorphosisfr
dc.subjectAnamorphosefr
dc.subjectAnamnèsefr
dc.subjectLittérature québécoisefr
dc.subjectQuébecfr
dc.subjectMémoirefr
dc.subjectHistoirefr
dc.titleThe impossible anamesis. Memory versus history in Hubert Aquin’s « Blackout »fr
dc.typeArticlefr
dc.contributor.affiliationUniversité de Montréal. Faculté des arts et des sciences. Département des littératures de langue françaisefr
dcterms.abstractSoon after joining the Canadian Confederation in 1867, the province of Quebec adopted the phrase « Je me souviens » ("As I recall") as its "national" motto, although many Québécois do not remember today what they were supposed to memorize, as collective subject, when their government voted this motion. My thesis is that contrary to other countries which have a strong sense of history based on a secular tradition, this process was more complicated in Quebec — as if a collective memory loss lied at the heart of it's history. Through a rereading of Hubert Aquin's cult novel, Trou de mémoire (in its English translation Blackout), first published in 1968, I try to illustrate this paradox and to emphasize the heuristic functions of memory blanks, gaps and lapses in certain postmodern narratives, after the historical breakdown of "the great narratives" (Lyotard). In this perspective, the example of Quebec, through the voice of one of its more gifted yet controversial novelist, can be seen as emblematic of what happens when the mnemonic impossibility of rewriting history opens up new possibilities for writing fiction.fr
dcterms.languageengfr
UdeM.VersionRioxxVersion acceptée / Accepted Manuscript
oaire.citationTitleCross-cultural studies
oaire.citationVolume20
oaire.citationStartPage225
oaire.citationEndPage240


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