Élites locales et institutions à l'époque des Rébellions : Jacques Archambault et l'épisode de presbytère de Saint-Roch-de-l'Achigan
Authors
Jean-René Thuot
Abstract
In Lower Canada before 1840, many found that their social status and identity was
being reconfigured by the conflict and social turmoil of the time. For certain members
of the local elite, the social prestige acquired over the years through occupying official
positions in the community was no longer a measure of their status or privilege
in the context of the Rebellions of 1837–1838. An individual case study illustrates
how this unsettling social context created a wide spectrum of social movement in
which the status of any individual was affected by a range of factors. The case of
Jacques Archambault, a member of the local elite, provides an opportunity to examine
what constitutes elite identity and the extent and limitations of the privilege of a
social elite.