Listen:
It’s not just the Inuit and other dwellers of the Canadian Arctic who’s sense of place and sense of self are profoundly informed by the climate and landscape of the North; it’s all of us that like to think of ourselves as citizens of the Great White North. It’s deeply ingrained in our identity as Canadians, this imaginary Arctic.
"The land of the midnight sun and nights that last for weeks. Polar bears and dog teams. Romance of the fur trade and doomed expeditions bearing names like Franklin. Woodcuts of ships locked in ice."
"Bone-chilling winds screaming over a bleak white landscape and endless sea of crumpled ice."
"Frayed black-and-white photographs of leather-skinned explorers staring intensely from another century."
That imagery is part of what defines us as Canadians.
In this audio documentary entitled Arctic Re-Imagined, Chris Wodskou explores what it means to be an Arctic nation in a time of climate change.
Producer: Dick Miller





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Old Inuit stories attest to the fact that our homeland was once ice-free.
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