Peculiar Places by Ryan Lee Cartwright

Peculiar Places

A Queer Crip History of White Rural Nonconformity

Ryan Lee Cartwright

Peculiar Places narrates queer and disability histories of white social nonconformity in twentieth-century rural United States. Ryan Lee Cartwright contends that, during the last hundred years, rural American gossip about queer and peculiar white neighbors crystallized into a national optic of white social degeneracy. Cartwright points to a tension between the idyll (rooted in the national myth of the Jeffersonian yeoman farmer and his idealized family) and the anti-idyll (the aberrant sexuality, gender transgression, and anomalous bodies and minds that are associated with rural white populations). Cartwright examines the anti-idyll in different genres from the 1910s through the 1990s: popular science in the 1910s and early ’20s, documentary photography in the ’30s, news media in the ’50s, poverty tours in the ’60s, horror films in the ’70s and early ’80s, and documentary films in the 1990s.

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Details

ISBN 9780226696881
Genre LGBT Studies/Social Sciences; Film and Television
Publication Date Jul-21
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Format Paperback
No. of Pages 272
Language English
Rating NotRated
BookID 15546

Author: LFWBooks