“…The ambivalent position of such groups in the English countryside is demonstrated with reference to gypsy-travellers, a group whose representation as dirty and deviant has tainted their whiteness and provoked a variety of exclusionary acts (Holloway, 2004;Sibley, 1997). 2 In the US too, some White migrant groups have been more easily accommodated than others within the rural, with Vanderbeck (2006Vanderbeck ( , 2008 demonstrating that poor White incomers have been problematic for elite Whites because they undermine discourses of 'natural' White superiority, suggesting that whiteness and class intersect in distinct ways to construct ideas of proper rural life. As such, specific groups may be portrayed as 'white trash', embodying an impolite and uncivilized lifestyle that is unbecoming in the rural.…”