Reimagining Rural: Urbanormative Portrayals of Rural Life: Studies in Urban–Rural Dynamics
Editat de Gregory M. Fulkerson, Alexander R. Thomas Contribuţii de Leanne M. Avery, Barbara Ching, Karen E. Hayden, Karl A. Jicha, Brian M. Lowe, Pilar Erin McKay, John W. Sippleen Limba Engleză Hardback – 20 iun 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781498534062
ISBN-10: 1498534066
Pagini: 172
Ilustrații: 5 b/w illustrations; 8 tables;
Dimensiuni: 161 x 236 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Studies in Urban–Rural Dynamics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 1498534066
Pagini: 172
Ilustrații: 5 b/w illustrations; 8 tables;
Dimensiuni: 161 x 236 x 19 mm
Greutate: 0.44 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Seria Studies in Urban–Rural Dynamics
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Chapter 1: Introduction: The Need to Reimagine Rural, Gregory M. Fulkerson & Alexander R. Thomas
Part I: Popular Media Representations of Rural
Chapter 2: Representations of Rural in Popular North American Television, Gregory M. Fulkerson & Brian M. Lowe
Chapter 3: Portrayals of Rural People and Places in Reality Television Programming: How Popular American Cable Series Misrepresent Rural Realities, Karl A. Jicha
Chapter 4: Inbred Horror Revisited: The Fear of the Rural in Twenty-First Century Backwoods Horror Films, Karen Hayden
Chapter 5: Reconsidering the Rural in the End: Rural Representations in Post-Apocalyptic Settings, Brian M. Lowe
Part II: The Sources of Rural Meaning and Knowledge Construction
Chapter 6: Urbanormativity in News Coverage of Rural Life, Pilar Erin McKay
Chapter 7: Cow College and Critical Rural Knowledge, Barbara Ching
Chapter 8: Common Core, STEM, and Rural schools: Views from Students and States, Leanne M. Avery & John W. Sipple
Chapter 9: Conclusion: Reimagining Rur
Part I: Popular Media Representations of Rural
Chapter 2: Representations of Rural in Popular North American Television, Gregory M. Fulkerson & Brian M. Lowe
Chapter 3: Portrayals of Rural People and Places in Reality Television Programming: How Popular American Cable Series Misrepresent Rural Realities, Karl A. Jicha
Chapter 4: Inbred Horror Revisited: The Fear of the Rural in Twenty-First Century Backwoods Horror Films, Karen Hayden
Chapter 5: Reconsidering the Rural in the End: Rural Representations in Post-Apocalyptic Settings, Brian M. Lowe
Part II: The Sources of Rural Meaning and Knowledge Construction
Chapter 6: Urbanormativity in News Coverage of Rural Life, Pilar Erin McKay
Chapter 7: Cow College and Critical Rural Knowledge, Barbara Ching
Chapter 8: Common Core, STEM, and Rural schools: Views from Students and States, Leanne M. Avery & John W. Sipple
Chapter 9: Conclusion: Reimagining Rur
Recenzii
This book is essential reading for those seeking a richer social scientific understanding of contemporary rural life. It is destined to stimulate much thoughtful debate and it is a useful tool for those seeking to challenge hurtful stereotypes of rural people and the communities in which they live.
At times, it seems that the image of 'rural' is a giant contradiction-it is either a safe, idyllic landscape of highly cohesive communities, or a dark place of dangerous and violent people who prey on outsides with a repertoire of sadistically inspired instruments of pain and death. Sometime those images are reinforced by social scientists who poorly frame their conceptual frameworks and shortcut their research by avoiding the complexities and nuances of the real 'rural'. This is why Fulkerson and Thomas' book is a great service to both the scholarly and journalistic communities. It debunks both the rural idyll and the rural-as-evil, and offers alternatives that are more befitting of the rural realities of America today.
At times, it seems that the image of 'rural' is a giant contradiction-it is either a safe, idyllic landscape of highly cohesive communities, or a dark place of dangerous and violent people who prey on outsides with a repertoire of sadistically inspired instruments of pain and death. Sometime those images are reinforced by social scientists who poorly frame their conceptual frameworks and shortcut their research by avoiding the complexities and nuances of the real 'rural'. This is why Fulkerson and Thomas' book is a great service to both the scholarly and journalistic communities. It debunks both the rural idyll and the rural-as-evil, and offers alternatives that are more befitting of the rural realities of America today.