question archive How Quebecers have lived together, earned a living, interacted with one another, and responded to various political regimes in the context of colonialism, patriarchy, capitalism, and racism? Quebec's minority status in Canada, the 11 Indigenous nations within its territory, and the long-standing presence of multilingual, multiethnic, racialized, and multi-religious communities in Montreal has resulted in anxiety about the 'racial' makeup of Quebec particularly in periods of mass immigration and has subjected newcomers to intolerance and debates about their inability to meet the standards of inclusion

How Quebecers have lived together, earned a living, interacted with one another, and responded to various political regimes in the context of colonialism, patriarchy, capitalism, and racism? Quebec's minority status in Canada, the 11 Indigenous nations within its territory, and the long-standing presence of multilingual, multiethnic, racialized, and multi-religious communities in Montreal has resulted in anxiety about the 'racial' makeup of Quebec particularly in periods of mass immigration and has subjected newcomers to intolerance and debates about their inability to meet the standards of inclusion

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How Quebecers have lived together, earned a living, interacted with one another, and responded to various political regimes in the context of colonialism, patriarchy, capitalism, and racism? Quebec's minority status in Canada, the 11 Indigenous nations within its territory, and the long-standing presence of multilingual, multiethnic, racialized, and multi-religious communities in Montreal has resulted in anxiety about the 'racial' makeup of Quebec particularly in periods of mass immigration and has subjected newcomers to intolerance and debates about their inability to meet the standards of inclusion. Closely related to these tensions have been conflicting ideas about citizenship and belonging as expressions of inclusion, exclusion, and hierarchy. Taking all of this into consideration including Benedict Anderson's concept of the imagined community, who is a Quebecer? 

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