LGBTQ Lerature is a � Rears and Book Lovers � seri dited to discsg lerature that has ma an impact on the liv of lbian, gay, bisexual, transgenr, and queer people. From ...
Contents:
- GAY RAL AMERI: UP TO 5 PERCENT OF RAL RINTS ARE LGBTQ, REPORT FDS
- QUEER THE COUNTRY: WHY SOME LGBTQ AMERINS PREFER RURAL LIFE TO URBAN ‘GAYBORHOODS’
- TEXAS C: A REALISTIC PORTRA OF GAY RURAL LIFE
- A VERMONT PRODUCTN OF 'FARM BOYS' EXPLOR GAY RURAL LIFE
- LGBTQ LERATURE: FARM BOYS: LIV OF GAY MEN OM THE RURAL MIDWT
GAY RAL AMERI: UP TO 5 PERCENT OF RAL RINTS ARE LGBTQ, REPORT FDS
Stereotypilly, gay, queer and trans kids flee small towns to fd acceptance big, diverse ci like New York or Chigo. But evince shows many will eventually return to ral areas. * gay rural life *
Sce 2015 I have nducted terviews wh 40 ral LGBTQ people and analyzed var survey data sets to unrstand the ral gay experience. My study found that many LGBTQ people ral areas view their sexual inty substantially differently om their urban unterparts – and qutn the mers of urban gay life.
QUEER THE COUNTRY: WHY SOME LGBTQ AMERINS PREFER RURAL LIFE TO URBAN ‘GAYBORHOODS’
Millns of lbian, gay, bisexual and transgenr people live ral areas of the U.S. — largely by choice, acrdg to Movement Advancement Project. * gay rural life *
The standard narrative of ral gay life is that ’s tough for LGBTQ kids who flee their ral hometowns for inic urban “gayborhoods” like Chigo’s Boystown or the Castro San Francis – plac where they n fd love, feel “normal” and be surround by others like them.
Those who returned home om urban gayborhoods also told me they found gay cy livg rarely livered on s promis of pannship and cln.
Rural LGBTQ Amerins are ls likely to participate inic gay rights events like the Pri para, terviews and survey data fd. Such ments ll to qutn certa assumptns of the ntemporary gay rights movement, cludg that “gayborhoods” are the pnacle of gay life and that ral Ameri is no place for LGBTQ people.
TEXAS C: A REALISTIC PORTRA OF GAY RURAL LIFE
Pop portrayals of LGBTQ Amerins tend to feature urban gay life, om Ru Pl’s “Drag Race” and “Queer Eye” and “Pose.” But not all gay people live ci. Demographers timate that 15% to 20% of the Uned Stat’ total LGBTQ populatn —… * gay rural life *
Fifty six percent of gay, lbian and bisexual people across the untry reported at least one stance of discrimatn or patient profilg a health re settg. "‘SETTLING INTO RURAL LIFE’While challeng for LGBTQ people n be “amplified” ral areas, the report also found bright spots for lbian, gay, bisexual, transgenr and queer people livg nonmetropolan upl and LGBTQ dividuals are raisg children ral areas at higher rat than urban areas.
Yet he moved back 2013, to a small town outsi Erie to start his own said that while he felt safe Philly’s “gayborhood, ” he was often verbally harassed other areas of the cy and knew of vlent attacks on gay was nervo to move back to ral Pennsylvania, fearg social isolatn and reprsn. The stori llected by Garrger over the years have been shared on the Country Queers webse and Instagram page, and startg June 30, the new “Country Queers” podst will but on Apple Podsts, Spotify and ‘monotony and fabulosy’ of ral lifeFor the past seven years, Garrger has terviewed 65 people om 15 stat — om Arizona all the way to Vermont — and has llaborated wh queer anizatns cludg the Two Spir Natnal Cultural Exchange, the Kansas Queer Youth Network and the Internatnal Gay Roo Associatn.
“When I tell my story, I tell people that I me out twice: one is the Wtern sense of beg gay, and the send was more of a cultural sense of beg gay, ” Apache told NBC News. “When I have nversatns wh people back home, there was a sort of fear or a kd of apprehensn when I said I was gay, bee their ncept, they thk of the gay person as somebody not livg unr rervatn, who didn’t have any rponsible ti to the cultural aspect of the tribe, which I thought was kd of an tertg perceptn, but wasn’t until I clared that I was g out as a Two Spir person that that nnectn ma more sense"‘I had to go back to the mountas’Hermelda Cortés, who serv as an edorial adviser for the new podst, was featured one of Country Queers’ Instagram takeovers. Sce 2015 I have nducted terviews wh 40 ral LGBTQ people and analyzed var survey data sets to unrstand the ral gay study rults, now unr peer review for publitn an amic journal, found that many LGBTQ people ral areas view their sexual inty substantially differently om their urban unterparts — and qutn the mers of urban gay e, easy goThe standard narrative of ral gay life is that ’s tough for LGBTQ kids who flee their ral hometowns for inic urban “gayborhoods” like Chigo’s Boystown or the Castro San Francis — plac where they n fd love, feel “normal” and be surround by others like this ral exod story is plete.
A VERMONT PRODUCTN OF 'FARM BOYS' EXPLOR GAY RURAL LIFE
Pop portrayals of LGBTQ Amerins tend to feature urban gay life, om Ru Pl’s “Drag Race” and “Queer Eye” and “Pose.” But not all gay people * gay rural life *
” The gay protagonists of the films are lonely, seldom able to exprs their sexual my analysis of a 2013 Pew Survey of LGBTQ Amerins — the latt available prehensive natnal survey data on this populatn — showed that LGBTQ ral rints are actually more likely to be legally married than their urban unterparts — 24.
LGBTQ LERATURE: FARM BOYS: LIV OF GAY MEN OM THE RURAL MIDWT
In the sprg of 1992, Milwkee wrer Will Fellows began terviewg 75 gay men, ag 25 to 84, who'd grown up farm fai throughout... * gay rural life *
The ral LGBTQ people I spoke wh placed a high value on monogamy — on what many of them nsir a “normal” who returned home om urban gayborhoods also told me they found gay cy livg rarely livered on s promis of pannship and cln. And they had missed the charm of small-town Nevar/Getty ImagNo peThe ral LGBTQ people I terviewed seemed to place ls importance on beg gay than their urban muni had.
* gay rural life *
Downplayg their sexual or genr inti, many emphasized other aspects of themselv, such as their volvement mic, sports, nature or rejected an urban gay culture that they felt was shallow and overly foced on gayns as the fg feature of life.
Lee-Ann Fenge, Kip Jon, Gay and Pleasant Land? Explorg Sexualy, Ageg and Ruraly a Multi-Method, Performative Project, The Brish Journal of Social Work, Vol. 42, No. 2 (MARCH 2012), pp. 300-317 * gay rural life *
”Such ments ll to qutn certa assumptns of the ntemporary gay rights movement, cludg that “gayborhoods” are the pnacle of gay life and that ral Ameri is no place for LGBTQ may be ls te, though, for Black and Lato LGBTQ people. My study rults, now unr peer review for publitn an amic journal, found that many LGBTQ people ral areas view their sexual inty substantially differently om their urban unterparts – and qutn the mers of urban gay life. The standard narrative of ral gay life is that ’s tough for LGBTQ kids who flee their ral hometowns for inic urban “gayborhoods” like Chigo’s Boystown or the Castro San Francis – plac where they n fd love, feel “normal” and be surround by others like them.