Speak White
7.4 /10 1 Votes
Country Canada | 7.2/10 Duration Language French | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Director Pierre FalardeauJulien Poulin Release date 1980 (1980) |
texte et parole speak white par michele lalonde
Speak White is a racist insult used by English-speaking Canadians against those who speak other languages in public, especially French Canadians. The slur inspired a French language poem composed by Québécois writer Michèle Lalonde in 1968. It was first recited in 1970 and was published in 1974 by Editions de l'Hexagone, Montreal. It denounced the poor situation of French-speakers in Quebec and takes the tone of a collective complaint against English-speaking Quebecers. Her poem is directed primarily at English Canada, although often citing British and American references such as Shakespeare, Keats, the Thames, the Potomac and Wall Street as its symbols of linguistic oppression.
Contents
- texte et parole speak white par michele lalonde
- Miche le lalonde speak white la nuit de la poe sie 1970 w english subs
- Origin
- References

In 1980, Speak White was made into a short motion picture by filmmakers Pierre Falardeau and Julien Poulin, the six-minute film featured actress Marie Eykel reading Lalonde's poem. It was released by the National Film Board of Canada.
Italian-Quebecer journalist playwright Marco Micone also wrote a poem in response called Speak What?, depicting allophone immigrants as the same oppressed class as the Québécois in Quebec, and calling for a more inclusive society. The poem Speak White is an integral part of a one-man play by Robert Lepage "887" which premiered in Toronto in 2015, and was also performed in August 2015 at the Edinburgh International Arts Festival in Scotland.
Miche le lalonde speak white la nuit de la poe sie 1970 w english subs
Origin
"Speak White" is a racist insult used by English-speaking Canadians against those who speak other languages in public. André Laurendeau recorded anecdotal evidence in his 1963 journal during the Laurendeau-Dunton Commission that English Canadians would hurl the phrase at French Canadians outside Quebec, and speculated that it was borrowed from the Southern United States. Anecdotal evidence also suggests that the phrase was used against immigrants.
References
Speak White WikipediaSpeak White IMDb Speak White themoviedb.org