Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau's 'Bad' French Skills A Reflection Of His Outsider Status In Quebec: Study

The Canadian Press, 01 May, 2019 06:40 PM

    MONTREAL — New research from an American academic concludes Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's spoken French is unfairly criticized in Quebec because he is seen as an outsider.


    Prof. Yulia Bosworth of Binghamton University in New York suggests that when the province's media elite attack Justin Trudeau's French skills, they are less focused on the language and more on denying him membership in Quebec's collective identity.


    Her article, "The 'Bad' French of Justin Trudeau: When Language, Ideology, and Politics Collide," was published in the most recent issue of the American Review of Canadian Studies. The author studied 53 online news items, mostly between April 2013 and January 2017, that discussed Trudeau's linguistic abilities or those of other federal politicians.


    Bosworth, a professor of French linguistics, discovered a near-unanimous chorus of criticism of the quality of Trudeau's French, which she says suggests a bias against Trudeau.


    The author says Trudeau's name evokes memories of his late father, former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, whose vision of a bilingual, united and multicultural Canada is rejected by many in Quebec's media elite.


    She adds Quebec journalists are also indignant at how Trudeau views himself as bilingual and francophone, a cultural intersection she says is construed in the province as necessarily clashing.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Third Case Of Measles Recorded On Vancouver Island, Total Cases In B.C. Now 23

    Third Case Of Measles Recorded On Vancouver Island, Total Cases In B.C. Now 23
    VICTORIA — The number of confirmed cases of measles in British Columbia has now climbed to 23, with a new case reported on Vancouver Island.

    Third Case Of Measles Recorded On Vancouver Island, Total Cases In B.C. Now 23

    B.C. Company Can Sell Prescription Eyewear Online In Ontario, Court Rules

    B.C. Company Can Sell Prescription Eyewear Online In Ontario, Court Rules
    Ontario regulators have no right to block a company legally operating elsewhere in Canada from selling prescription eyewear to online customers in the province, an Appeal Court ruled on Thursday.

    B.C. Company Can Sell Prescription Eyewear Online In Ontario, Court Rules

    Liberals' Mortgage Plan To Have Tiny Effect On Housing Prices: CMHC

    Liberals' Mortgage Plan To Have Tiny Effect On Housing Prices: CMHC
    Canada's housing agency says new spending measures aimed at helping first-time buyers afford homes won't push prices up more than a few tenths of a percentage point.

    Liberals' Mortgage Plan To Have Tiny Effect On Housing Prices: CMHC

    Ex-Hostage Boyle Was Angry, Bossy After Release, Witnesses Tell Court

    OTTAWA — Witnesses appearing at Joshua Boyle's assault trial Thursday describe the former Afghanistan hostage as angry and domineering in the days following his release from captivity.

    Ex-Hostage Boyle Was Angry, Bossy After Release, Witnesses Tell Court

    Cost Of Giving Ill Workers Extra EI Sickness Benefits? $1.1 Billion, PBO Says

    Cost Of Giving Ill Workers Extra EI Sickness Benefits? $1.1 Billion, PBO Says
    OTTAWA — The parliamentary spending watchdog says income supports for people who are too sick to work for up to a year would cost the federal government $1 billion more than its current program.

    Cost Of Giving Ill Workers Extra EI Sickness Benefits? $1.1 Billion, PBO Says

    'I Want To Remember:' Survivors, Families Mark Broncos Tragedy Forever With Ink

    It's a day many want to forget. It's the people they want to remember.

    'I Want To Remember:' Survivors, Families Mark Broncos Tragedy Forever With Ink