Jeanne Lapointe


Jeanne Lapointe was a Canadian academic and intellectual.
In 1940, she was the first female professor of literature in the Faculty of Arts of the Laval University. Her essays and actions contributed to the advent of literary modernity in Québec, thanks to her intellectual debates published in the journal Cité Libre and its influence on major Quebec writers such as Marie-Claire Blais, Anne Hébert and Gabrielle Roy, for whom she played the role of mentor. Her actions as Commissioner on the Parent Commission and Bird Commission during the Quiet Revolution gave a political forum for progressive ideas about education in Quebec and the status of women in Canada. It was then that her words were defined ironically against the discourse of domination and sexual inequality, rhetoric she developed in psychoanalytic literary analysis and feminism. Correspondence filed with Library and Archives Canada, documents communication with many intellectuals as well as Quebec and European writers such as Jean Le Moyne, Louky Bersianik, Pierre Gélinas, Judith Jasmin, Félix-Antoine Savard, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Driss Chraïbi, Nathalie Sarraute, and others.

Commemoration

Events

Jeanne-Lapointe Fund

comes from a donation made by Jeanne Lapointe to the R.A.F Foundation. It is used to award bursaries for excellence as well as to support new research projects, feminist community services, and training and outreach activities for women's studies. The Claire-Bonenfant Chair - Women, Knowledge and Societies assumes the evaluation of submitted projects; the Fonds is under the responsibility of the Laval University Foundation.

Théry-Lapointe Scholarship

was created by Chantal Théry, retired professor at Laval University. It is awarded annually to encourage the dissemination of feminist research and creation by graduate students in the Faculty of Arts and Humanities at Laval University.

Acfas Jeanne-Lapointe Award

The creation of the was announced on November 15, 2019 by the French Association for the Advancement of Science. It rewards the excellence and influence of the work and actions of a researcher in the field of educational sciences. The award is "named in honor of Jeanne Lapointe, member of the Royal Commission on Education in the Province of Quebec, the only lay woman, lead author of the Parent report, and researcher in the humanities and social sciences. exceptional academic career. was a pioneer in the francophone university world, where she worked for 47 years."

Works

Essays and studies

, directed by Marie-Andrée Beaudet, Mylène Bédard et Claudia Raby, with the collaboration of Juliette Bernatchez, Montréal, Leméac, 2019, 253 p.

Articles about Jeanne Lapointe (in french)