The Media of Environmental Listening in Don McKay’s Songs for the Songs of Birds

Abstract:

Drawing on media ecology and acoustic ecology, this essay "reads" Don McKay's audiobook, Songs for the Songs of Birds (2008). The essay explains this audiobook as a meditation on listening and on media and technology, such as headphones and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), that produce an interplay between the natural environments of birds and our built environments. It also contends that various metaphorical abstractions and deterritorializations in the recording and imagery of the audiobook are part of McKay's lament for extinct birds and his concern for threatened species, not only birds but also humans.


This article “The Media of Environmental Listening in Don McKay’s Songs for the Songs of Birds” originally appeared in Canadian Literature 256 (2024): 103-122.

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