Harvey, Jean-Charles (1891-1967). Canadian journalist and writer, best known for Les Demi-Civilisés (1934), a novel which gained notoriety from being condemned by the Church as dangerously freethinking. But the novel is too stereotyped in expression to carry conviction as a clarion call for freedom of thought and speech. Moreover, its thesis that modern Quebec has fallen from the natural simplicity of its agrarian past into the decadence of a semieducated society is strangely conservative and substantially undercuts its ostensible radicalism.
[Ian Lockerbie]




