Montreal, City of Water

An Environmental History

By Michèle Dagenais
Translated by Peter Feldstein
Categories: History, Canadian History, Environmental & Nature Studies, Environmental History, Urban Studies, Planning & Architecture, Planning (urban & Regional), Regional & Cultural Studies, Canadian Studies
Series: Nature | History | Society
Publisher: Les Éditions du Boréal, UBC Press
Hardcover : 9780774836227, 256 pages, November 2017
Paperback : 9780774836234, 256 pages, June 2018
Ebook (PDF) : 9780774836241, 256 pages, November 2017
Ebook (EPUB) : 9780774836258, 256 pages, November 2017
Ebook (MobiPocket) : 9780774836265, 256 pages, November 2017

Table of contents

Foreword: Water-Ville / Graeme Wynn

Introduction

1 Montreal: One City, One Island

2 Sources of a New Definition of the City

3 The St. Lawrence: “A Superb Instrument to be Developed and Moulded”

4 From City to Island: The Extension of Water Systems and the Structuring of the Urban Fabric

5 In Search of the Lost River, or, the Urbanization of the Rivière des Prairies

6 The Weight of the Island: Connecting the City to the Continent

7 One City, One Archipelago: A Utopia?

Conclusion: In the Heart of the City

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Description

Built within an exceptional watershed, Montreal is intertwined with the waterways that ring its island and flow beneath it in underground networks. Montreal, City of Water focuses on water not only as a physical element – both shaping and shaped by urban development – but also as a sociocultural component of the life of the city. This unique study considers how water has produced and transformed urban space over two centuries. It traces the history of Montreal’s urbanization, shining a light on current concerns about water pollution, rehabilitation, and public access to the riverfront – and on the power relations involved in addressing them.

Reviews

The past was never paradise. Michèle Dagenais’s Montreal, City of Water: An Environmental History takes on the myth that Montrealers once enjoyed an idyllic relationship with the city’s streams and the St. Lawrence River; a relationship supposedly lost during the nineteenth century only to await recovery after the 1970s. Instead, Dagenais shows that there was never a break between people and the environment…

- Dale Barbour, University of Toronto

Montreal, City of Water is full of insights.

- Annmarie Adams