The Saint Lawrence River is a source of drinking water for Quebec residents, used for transportation of goods, and plays a vital role to the natural systems surrounding it. And yet, we take it for granted and continue to pollute and dump raw sewage into its waters.
Show Notes
The Saint-Lawrence River was used as a direct entry point for European colonizers as they made their way through and across the land that was eventually renamed Canada and the United States. Their arrival and use of the waterway eventually facilitated industrialization and its resulting ecological destruction, the extraction and depletion of the land's natural resources, and violence against Indigenous peoples that still continues today. In this fourth episode of On Interdependence, we examine how our use of the River damages the natural systems that rely on this large body of water.
Created, written and narrated by naakita feldman-kiss
Production assistance and sound design by Adam Mbowe
Scoring and audio engineering by Simon Chenaux and Yoann Denesle
Graphic and web design by angeli.ca
Funded by the Community Radio Fund of Canada.
What is Sounds In Our Changing World Presents: On Interdependence?
On Interdependence is a five part audio artwork that uses history, stories, sounds, and music to explore different perspectives and examine the threats posed by the climate crisis in Montreal. Each piece features a humanistic portrait of the city, its surroundings, and the lives that occupy it.
Created, written and narrated by naakita feldman-kiss
Production assistance and sound design by Adam Mbowe
Scoring and audio engineering by Simon Chenaux and Yoann Denesle
Graphic and web design by angeli.ca
Funded by the Community Radio Fund of Canada.