The echoes of the social and sexual revolution in the dramaturgy of Michel Tremblay: from national to personal identity

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Abstract

Michel Tremblay's dramatic space, Quebec’s “national treasure”, is populated by characters who are almost always confronted with alienation and the desire to rediscover, and even to create, their own identity. The heroes of Tremblay, whatever their sexual orientation and social positions are, have the story of a passage from inaction till the act of tearing themselves away from the pre-established order. Sometimes incapable of changing their situation, sometimes happy to finally be able to answer the question “Who am I?”, the characters in the Tremblayan theatre are at all times representatives of the Quebec society, which, during the Quiet Revolution, suffered profound changes in identity. Throughout the social evolution in Quebec in the 1960s and 1970s, the awareness of the identity of the society and that of the dramatic characters are two matters that coexist in parallel manner. Thus, the latter become allegories of the social structure on at least two levels: moral and cultural, in the case of the Belles-Sœurs and À toi, pour toujours, ta Marie-Lou representing several frustrations: of the heroines, overwhelmed by the powerless patriarchal culture; sexual, represented for example by Hosanna being the symbol of the social expression of homosexuality and sexual identity in general; and finally, actional, as in the case of Sainte Carmen de la Main, which constitutes a message to Québécois to take their destiny in their hands. The main objective of the article is to bring some reflections on theatrical (r)evolutions which reflected the changes of the Quiet Revolution within the entire society.

Article Details




Sebastian Zacharow

Author Biography

Sebastian Zacharow, Universidad de Łódź (Polonia)
Universidad de Łódź (Polonia)
Zacharow, S. (2022). The echoes of the social and sexual revolution in the dramaturgy of Michel Tremblay: from national to personal identity. ALPHA: Revista De Artes, Letras Y Filosofía, (55), 89-99. https://doi.org/10.32735/S0718-22012022000551094

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