A major and important study to which I’ve often referred over the years, without ever having taken the time to read it from cover to cover. Now I have! Historian Sean Mills offers a look back at the decade of the 1960s in Montreal, a time of great upheaval, awareness and activism for various groups. Mills skilfully illustrates how Montreal, over the course of the decade, drew inspiration from (and, at times, in turn, inspired) the international context, developing a theory of decolonization “adapted” to the Quebec case, notably through the writings of leading figures of the period. Beyond the rhetoric and ideological links with the internationalist left, this movement also had many blind spots, which the author does not fail to point out (very masculine discourses, little room for women, blindness to its own colonial past and privileged condition, racism, etc.). Mills nevertheless demonstrates that this activism served as a starting point for the organization of a more general movement (on women’s rights, working conditions, immigration, etc.), becoming, progressively, more inclusive.
This is an important book for understanding the intellectual, social and political ferment of the 1960s (and even 1970s) in Montreal and in the province of Quebec. The study is based on a solid referential apparatus and, despite its academic nature, remains accessible.