"Honorary Protestants": The Jewish School Question in Montreal, 1867-1997 is a 2015 non-fiction book by David Fraser, published by University of Toronto Press. It is about the ways Jewish residents of Montreal negotiated the K-12 educational environment in the city; in the time period scope of the book, public schools were either Catholic or Protestant and divided into school districts along those lines instead of along linguistic lines.
The title originates from a statement in A Meeting of the People: School Boards and Protestant Communities in Quebec, 1801-1998 about how Jewish K-12 students typically attended Protestant schools by custom. [1]
David Fraser works for the University of Nottingham as a professor, with his field being law and social theory. [2]
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The book has fourteen chapters. [2]
The book has information on Jewish Canadians trying to get rights to for education and representation on boards of trustees of school districts. [3]
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Jory Binder, a Juris Doctor candidate of Osgoode Hall Law School, wrote that the "contextual stance on the rule of law" is the primary "contribution" of the work, and that the historical developments are "skilfully" explained. [4]
Anthony Di Masco of Bishop's University described the book as "a valuable new contribution to" its field. [5]
David S. Koffman of York University wrote that of what the book covers, the "scholarship is meticulous and unassailable"; Koffman stated that he wished that the book covered some other related aspects. [6]
Roderick MacLeod, who co-wrote A Meeting of the People, argued that "Honorary Protestants" has "the lack of a sense of human agency" - that is, not showing how individuals felt/acted, as its "real shortcoming", and MacLeod also criticized "errors and confusing passages". [7] MacLeod did not like how he perceived the use of the title "Honorary Protestants" as being "sarcastically" done. [8]