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| PHOTO: MARTIN BEAULIEU |
Serge Courville likens much of his academic work to solving a puzzle.
The professor emeritus of geography at Université Laval spent
years charting the development of the 19th-century rural landscape
in his native Quebec to understand how its society evolved. He mapped
census divisions and subdivisions, retracing the boundaries of seigneuries,
parishes and municipalities. In the end, his sleuthing shook up
long-held assumptions about historical rural Quebec.
For instance, Courville's findings suggest that it was not an isolated,
non-entrepreneurial backwater. Historians had long attributed an "agricultural
crisis" in the St. Lawrence Lowland in the early 1800s — a
decline in wheat production and exports — to outdated farming
practices. By mapping reams of data, Courville discovered that farmers
in Lower Canada (now Quebec) diversified their crops and began supplying
local markets because towns and rural industries were rapidly growing
and because the farmers could no longer compete with cheaper wheat
in Upper Canada. Far from facing a crisis, farmers were adapting
to socio-economic changes also affecting North America and Europe.
Through such meticulous empirical research and sharp analysis,
Courville has made his mark as one of Canada's leading historical
geographers. He is being honoured with the 2006 Massey Medal for
outstanding achievement in Canadian geography. Established by Governor
General Vincent Massey in 1959, the award is administered by The
Royal Canadian Geographical Society.
During his 22 years at Laval, Courville authored or co-authored
some 17 books, including an ambitious comparative study of colonization
and immigration in Canada. He also oversaw the publication of several
collections, such as the seven-volume Atlas historique du Québec. "A
geographer always dreams of producing a map or atlas," says
Courville. "It's a trademark!"
An advocate of hands-on teaching, Courville invited his graduate
students to contribute to the historical atlases. He is a "strong
pedagogue," says Brian Osborne, professor emeritus of geography
at Queen's University who has known Courville for 30 years. "He's
been a leading figure as a professor, and he produced quite a group
of welltrained historical geographers."
Courville is not yet done with the puzzle of changing boundaries.
He is currently serving on the Commission de la représentation électorale,
which is redrawing the electoral map of Quebec.
- Monique Roy-Sole
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