“…As scholars work to create knowledge about same-sex sexualities in areas of the globe where there has been little attention thus far, scholars also acknowledge the barriers and challenges to doing such work (Blidon & Zaragocin, 2019;Piton ak & Klingorov a, 2019;Silva & Ornat, 2016). Further, scholarship focused on small towns and rural areas in the United States provides another challenge to dominant narratives that posit these spaces as wholly unfavorable for lesbian, bisexual, and queer-identified women's lives (Barton, 2012;Eaves, 2016;Forstie, 2018;Gray, 2009;Oswald & Culton, 2003;Oswald & Lazarevic, 2011;Woodell, Kazyak, & Compton, 2015). Such work highlights how some lesbian, bisexual, and queer-identified women experience small towns as spaces where they can be out, accepted, and visible, and that their interpretations rely on making distinctions between urban and rural LGBTQ identities (Kazyak, 2011(Kazyak, , 2012Thomsen, 2016).…”