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32 The Rural

  • Carly Thomsen and Lillian Nagengast
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Abstract

This chapter outlines feminist and queer thinking on the rural with the goal of articulating the contours of rural feminism, which, we argue, requires more complicated understandings of both the rural and feminism. Feminist ideas and strategies in rural places often differ from stereotypical iterations of feminism as loud, in-your-face, and unruly. Furthermore, they are often forged outside of formal feminist institutions and are negotiated through place-based connections. While rural feminist resistance is quite diverse, it is often united by a refusal to describe itself as ‘feminist.’ The overdetermination of rural women as not feminists and the overdetermination of feminism as not rural are useful entry points for exploring the rural as a site of inquiry for feminist political geography. Here, we use the rural United States to probe feminism’s boundaries, both material and imagined, asking: what is core to feminist and queer thinking about the rural? What can rural feminism tell us about how the borders of mainstream feminism are constructed and policed? How might we think about rurality and feminism if scholars, activists, and politicians took rural feminism more seriously?

Abstract

This chapter outlines feminist and queer thinking on the rural with the goal of articulating the contours of rural feminism, which, we argue, requires more complicated understandings of both the rural and feminism. Feminist ideas and strategies in rural places often differ from stereotypical iterations of feminism as loud, in-your-face, and unruly. Furthermore, they are often forged outside of formal feminist institutions and are negotiated through place-based connections. While rural feminist resistance is quite diverse, it is often united by a refusal to describe itself as ‘feminist.’ The overdetermination of rural women as not feminists and the overdetermination of feminism as not rural are useful entry points for exploring the rural as a site of inquiry for feminist political geography. Here, we use the rural United States to probe feminism’s boundaries, both material and imagined, asking: what is core to feminist and queer thinking about the rural? What can rural feminism tell us about how the borders of mainstream feminism are constructed and policed? How might we think about rurality and feminism if scholars, activists, and politicians took rural feminism more seriously?

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