2003
DOI: 10.1191/0309132503ph427oa
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Embodied rural geographies: Developing research agendas

Abstract: This paper responds to the scarcity of work on rural embodiment. We argue that a consideration of ‘the body’ can contribute significantly to an understanding of rural social relations and communities. In particular, this paper provides an additional critical dimension to the understanding of the relationship between changing femininities, masculinities, rurality and the performance of sexuality in rural areas. It shows how dominant constructions of rural masculinity and femininity incorporate highly traditiona… Show more

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Cited by 92 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…Bale 2003Bale , 2004, critical scholars of both sport and nature-society relations have been much less attentive to this interrelationship. Indeed, social studies of sport have tended to neglect its geographies 2 while social scientific studies of nature and natural environments, particularly those in human geography, have been little concerned with the body (Woodward, 1998;MacNaughton and Urry, 2000;Little and Leyshon, 2003). This paper responds to this neglect by exploring the production of performance middle and long-distance running bodies and the role of particular -'natural' -spaces in this process.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Bale 2003Bale , 2004, critical scholars of both sport and nature-society relations have been much less attentive to this interrelationship. Indeed, social studies of sport have tended to neglect its geographies 2 while social scientific studies of nature and natural environments, particularly those in human geography, have been little concerned with the body (Woodward, 1998;MacNaughton and Urry, 2000;Little and Leyshon, 2003). This paper responds to this neglect by exploring the production of performance middle and long-distance running bodies and the role of particular -'natural' -spaces in this process.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Just as there is no one 'rural', neither is there a uniform 'rural masculinity' (Campbell and Bell, 2000;Cloke, 2005;Little and Leyshon, 2003). In an attempt to avoid the pitfalls of constructing a singular or essentialist 'rural masculinity', Campbell and Bell (2000) articulate the distinction between, on the one hand, the "masculine in the rural" and, on the other, the "rural in the masculine".…”
Section: Rural Masculinitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…One dominant coding, scholars have noted, is that of the 'rural idyll' (Valentine, 1997). According to the ethos of the 'rural idyll', remote places are understood as safe, free, close to nature, peaceful, innocent and healthy communities where "everybody knows everybody" (see Leyshon, 2008;Little and Leyshon, 2003;Matthews, Taylor, Sherwood, Tucker and Limb, 2000;Ni Laoire, 2007;Rye, 2006). Indeed, such qualities overlap with and inform constructions of the 'rural childhood idyll' (Jones, 1997(Jones, , 2000(Jones, , 2007, where it is assumed that the countryside is the 'natural' place of childhood (Valentine, 1997).…”
Section: The Discursive Constructions Of 'The Rural'mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…At the same time, new research areas that may be added to the previous ones are being gradually developed including, in particular, works from the field of the geography of food, which examines the connections among production, consumption, and presentation (Goodman, 2001), farming cultures (Moris & Evans, 2004), and the facilities in rural space and bringing together experiences of rurality (Little & Leyshon, 2003). For needs of this paper, our focus will, therefore, be shifted away from the wider context of rural changes towards agrarian production as an element that has been deemed as a compatible function of rural spaces of Bosnia and Herzegovina.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%