2003
DOI: 10.1046/j.1467-9523.2003.00252.x
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‘Riding the Rural Love Train’: Heterosexuality and the Rural Community

Abstract: I n this paper I examine the relationship between sexual identity and the social construction of rurality. Specifically, I discuss the centrality of particular embodiments of heterosexuality to rural masculinities and femininities and to gender relations within the rural community. In so doing I wish to build on existing work on gender and rurality and, in particular, to use theoretical discussions concerning the performance of sexual identity and its relationship with gender identity to inform the understandi… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(55 citation statements)
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“…As Little (2003) shows in her research in rural Britain, the ideal of a normative heterosexuality based on traditional masculine and feminine identities and on the nuclear family is central to notions of continuity in family farming. This is particularly significant in Ireland, where farm viability continues to be defined in terms of the demographic viability of the farm family, in other words the presence of a nuclear family with a relatively young age structure (O'Hara, 1997).…”
Section: Transformation In the Social Landscape Of Farmingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As Little (2003) shows in her research in rural Britain, the ideal of a normative heterosexuality based on traditional masculine and feminine identities and on the nuclear family is central to notions of continuity in family farming. This is particularly significant in Ireland, where farm viability continues to be defined in terms of the demographic viability of the farm family, in other words the presence of a nuclear family with a relatively young age structure (O'Hara, 1997).…”
Section: Transformation In the Social Landscape Of Farmingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Med inspirasjon fra nyere kjønnsforskning vil vi saerlig undersøke (re)konstruksjoner av heteroseksualitet i en naturkontekst. I arbeidet med denne artikkelen har vi saerlig latt oss inspirere av Hanne Haavinds teori om kjønn som makt og splittelse (1994,2008), nyere litteratur om natur (Broch 2004, 2014, L'orange Fürst 2004, Ween and Flikke 2009, samt studier om hvordan natur/sted, kultur og kjønn gjensidig konstituerer hverandre (Forsberg 2001, Little 2003, Little and Panelli 2007, Pedersen 2003, McDowell 1999, Simonsen 2001a, Gerrard 2011. Artikkelen bidrar til den antropologiske forståelsen av natur og kjønn gjennom å vise hvordan naturen i vår studie fremstår som en arena som (gjen)skaper heteroseksualitet, ikke minst gjennom relasjonen (russisk kvinnelig) novise og (norsk mannlig) ekspert.…”
Section: Naturen Som Rekreasjon Og Heteroseksuell Romantikkunclassified
“…The experiences of LGB people living in particular localities are key to understanding local government initiatives, given the commitment to community engagement that is part of local government modernisation, following the Local Government Act (2000). As I have noted above, the paper refers to developments in geographies of sexuality, including research concerning rural and small town sexualities (Bell and Valentine (1995), and Little, (2003)). The paper also speaks to the 'undesirable others' discussed by Casey (2007) in his examination of an urban commercial gay scene; Casey found that processes of exclusion of lesbians and gay men who are older, disabled, female, poor, or supposedly unattractive operate to construct the boundaries of urban gay spaces.…”
Section: The Spatialmentioning
confidence: 99%