Connected Struggles

Catholics, Nationalists, and Transnational Relations between Mexico and Quebec, 1917-1945

By Maurice Demers
Categories: Religious Studies
Publisher: McGill-Queen's University Press
Hardcover : 9780773543560, 304 pages, July 2014
Paperback : 9780773543577, 304 pages, July 2014
Ebook (PDF) : 9780773591981, July 2014
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780773591998, July 2014

Description

Nationalists from Quebec and Catholic militants from Mexico once shared a common cause, one that influenced international relations between their two countries. At a time when the Revolution and its aftermath in Mexico and world wars marginalized voices of political dissent in Canada, Catholics in both nations saw their cultural struggles as interconnected and worked to build transnational alliances as meaningful discourses of cultural identity. In Connected Struggles, Maurice Demers considers how and why groups from Mexico and Quebec actively sought to establish close cultural and political links. Drawing on extensive research in government, religious, and university archives in Mexico and Canada, Demers delves into the actors, their rationales, and the processes and meanings of such alliances. He proposes a reinterpretation of North-South collaboration in the Americas by analysing how the bonds created by Quebec's and Mexico's civil societies and religious communities influenced diplomatic relations, showing not only the Catholic origins of this solidarity, but its conservative - even reactionary - roots. Demers explains how the foreign ministries in Canada and Mexico both used and denounced these linkages, depending on the political gains to be made. Documenting the emergence of solidarity between French Canadians and Mexicans, Connected Struggles contributes to the understanding of the influence of civil societies in the history of international relations.

Reviews

"Connected Struggles makes a very significant and original contribution and represents a serious advance in state-of-the art research. Identity politics influenced the history of Canadian and Mexican diplomacy in the Americas - that is what is revealed and explained in this study, with all the implications this had for Canada's and Mexico's political contexts." Jean Meyer Barth, History Division, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas

“Sheds light on a significant, but still little-studied, period of transition in Mexican politics. Demers does an admirable job of considering what his narrative tells us about both Mexico and Canada. A fascinating story about both the extent to which civ

"The author sets out a historical context that ranges broadly. [...] This makes for a challenging and complex argument that spends equal time examining the internal politics of two sovereign nations and international relations as imagined, constructed, and played out between subaltern groups within each country." The Catholic Historical Review