Charles Castonguay
Charles Castonguay | |
---|---|
Born |
1940 Ottawa, Ontario |
Occupation | Professor of mathematics and statistics, researcher in language demographics |
Charles Castonguay (born 1940) is a retired associate professor of Mathematics and Statistics at the University of Ottawa.[1]
Biography
A native English speaker, he was sent by his parents to a French Catholic primary school. He took his first English courses in high school. Enrolled in the Canadian Armed Forces to pursue university-level studies, he obtained a masters of mathematics from the University of Ottawa. During the three years of his military service, he was affected to the headquarters in Ottawa as counsellor in mathematics and taught to young officers at the Collège militaire royal de Saint-Jean.[1]
After his service, he began teaching mathematics and statistics at the University of Ottawa and registered at McGill University to study the philosophy of mathematics and epistemology. The subject of his doctoral thesis was "meaning" and "existence" in mathematics. He obtained his Ph.D. in 1971.[1] (The thesis was published in 1972 and 1973.)
In 1970, he participated to a meeting of the Parti Québécois in the Laurier riding. René Lévesque was the speaker of this meeting intended to inform English speakers of the party's Sovereignty-Association project. After that, he militated for this party until the election of 1976.[1]
Partly to understand himself as a francized English speaker, he took great interest in the analysis of the linguistic behaviours of populations and language policies. He became a specialist on the subject of language shifts and completed several studies on behalf of Office québécois de la langue française.[1]
On January 25, 2001, he took an active part in a symposium held by the commission of the Estates-General on the Situation and Future of the French Language in Quebec (Les enjeux démographiques et l’intégration des immigrants). Thereafter, he co-authored a book criticizing its final report.
Since 2000, he collaborates to the Dossier linguistique in the newspaper L'aut'journal. He participated to the foundation of the Institut de recherche sur le français en Amérique in 2008.
Works
In English
- Thesis
- Meaning and Existence in Mathematics, New York: Springer-Verlag, 1972, 159 pages (also New York: Springer, 1973)
- Articles
- "Nation Building and Anglicization in Canada's Capital Region", in Inroads Journal, Issue 11, 2002, pp. 71–86
- "French is on the ropes. Why won’t Ottawa admit it ?", in Policy Options, volume 20, issue 8, 1999, pp. 39–50
- "Getting the facts straight on French : Reflections following the 1996 Census", in Inroads Journal, Issue 8, 1999, pages 57 to 77
- "The Fading Canadian Duality", in Language in Canada (ed. John R. Edwards), pp. 36–60, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998, 520 pages
- "Assimilation Trends among Official-Language Minorities. 1971-1991", in Towards the Twenty-First Century: Emerging Socio-Demographic Trends and Policy Issues in Canada, pp. 201–205, Federation of Canadian Demographers, Ottawa, 1996
- "The Anglicization of Canada, 1971-1981", in Language Problems and Language Planning, vol. 11, issue 1, Spring 1987
- "Intermarriage and Language Shift in Canada, 1971 and 1976", in Canadian Journal of Sociology, Vol. 7, No. 3 (Summer, 1982), pp. 263–277
- "The Economic Context of Bilingualism and Language Transfer in the Montreal Metropolitan Area", in The Canadian Journal of Economics, Vol. 12, No. 3 (Aug., 1979), pp. 468–479 (with Calvin J. Veltman, Jac-Andre Boulet)
- "Why Hide the Facts? The Federalist Approach to the Language Crisis in Canada", in Canadian Public Policy, 1979
- "Opportunities for the Study of Language Transfer in the 1971 Census", in Paul Lamy (ed.), Language Maintenance and Language Shift in Canada: New Dimensions in the Use of Census Language Data, Ottawa: Ottawa University Press, 1977, p. 63-73.
- "An Analysis of the Canadian Bilingual Districts Policy", in American Review of Canadian Studies, 1976
- Other
- Transcript of a Standing Joint Committee on Official Languages hearing, recorded on April 28, 1998
In French
- Studies
- Incidence du sous-dénombrement et des changements apportés aux questions de recensement sur l'évolution de la composition linguistique de la population du Québec entre 1991 et 2001 (Étude 3), Montréal: Office québécois de la langue française, September 26, 2005, 29 pages
- Les indicateurs généraux de vitalité des langues au Québec : comparabilité et tendances 1971-2001 (Étude 1), Montréal : Office québécois de la langue française, May 26, 2005, 48 pages
- La langue parlée au foyer : signification pour l’avenir du français et tendances récentes, Oral presentation given to a symposium held by the commission of the Estates-General on the Situation and Future of the French Language in Quebec, January 25, 2001
- L'indicateur de développement humain de l'ONU : le concept et son usage, Sainte-Foy: Publications du Québec, 1995, 68 pages
- L'assimilation linguistique : mesure et évolution 1971-1986, Québec: Conseil de la langue française, 1994, 243 pages
- Exogamie et anglicisation dans les régions de Montréal, Hull, Ottawa et Sudbury, Québec: Centre international de recherche sur le bilinguisme, 1981
Notes
References
- André Langlois, «Pensée obsessive et minorités francophones : Quand l’obsession remplace la raison», Recherches sociographiques, XLIII-2, May–August 2002 : 381-387.
- Richard Marcoux, Book Review of Charles Castonguay, Les indicateurs généraux de vitalité des langues au Québec : comparabilité et tendances 1971-2001, in Recherches sociographiques, XLVII-2, May–August 2006 : 394-397.
- Astrid Alkistis Fleischer, The Politics of Language in Quebec: Language Policy and Language Ideologies in a Pluriethnic Society, Ph.D. thesis, Georgetown University, Department of Linguistics, Washington D.C., 2007.
- Ginette Leroux. "Le mathématicien de la langue", in L'aut'journal sur le Web, Issue 208, April 2002