Polysemy in the Quebec debate
Polysemy, (from the Greek πολυσημεία = multiple meaning) is the capacity of signs (e.g. words, phrases, etc...) to have multiple meanings. The Quebec debate is full of ambiguous terms which make it very difficult for observers to follow the logic of arguments from both sides in French or English, even less so across the two!
Two Canadas
Advocates of Quebec independence will refuse to agree with the statement that "Samuel de Champlain is the founder of Canada" unless is implied the notion that the word "Canada" is used in its archaic sense of "Canada, the main region of the former province of New France". Because "Canada" is today a word that refers to the federal Dominion created by a law of the Parliament of Great Britain in 1867, we cannot say that Samuel de Champlain is the founder of this Canada, because he could not have founded any political entity some 235 years after his own death. What we can say is that Champlain is the founder of "French Canada", a country ceded by France to Great Britain in 1763. A few months later, the said province was renamed the "Province of Quebec".
Samuel de Champlain is the founder of a new state and a new community which today still perpetuates itself as a human group calling itself the "Québécois" because they consider their homeland to be Quebec. This multi-generational community is not comprised of only those who can trace their ancestry to the living population of French Canada in 1763. It is comprised of those who acquired the Québécois identity which today one can obtain by birth or by immigrating to Québec. Quebecers are very much aware of this reality, especially advocates of independence. The independentists are also very much aware that the provincial state which used to be called "Canada" under French rule, the state whose legal system was the Coutume de Paris, whose capital was in Quebec city, whose population resided along the St. Lawrence river valley is NOT the federal state which is today called "Canada".
| Quebec (political entity) | Canada (political entity) | |
|---|---|---|
| Time Period | ||
| Before 1608 |
Unknown | Unknown |
| 1608 to 1662 |
Canada | Non-existent |
| 1663 to 1763 |
Canada | Non-existent |
| 1763 to 1774 (Royal Proclamation) |
Province of Quebec | Non-existent |
| 1774 to 1791 (Quebec Act) |
Province of Quebec | British North America as of 1783 |
| 1791 to 1838 (Constitutional Act) |
Province of Lower Canada | British North America |
| 1841 to 1867 (Union Act) |
Province of Canada (Canada East ) | British North America |
| 1867 to 1982 (British North America Act) |
Province of Quebec | Dominion of Canada |
| 1982 to now (Constitutional Act) |
Province of Quebec | Canada |
Two nations
- A human community
- A human community and its political institutions
- As a synonym of sovereign State