Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture

Author:   Alexander R. Thomas ,  Brian Lowe ,  Greg Fulkerson ,  Polly Smith
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9780739135600


Pages:   224
Publication Date:   31 May 2013
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture


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Overview

Critical Rural Theory is an attempt to bring together the concepts of structure, space, and culture in order to explain the relationship between rural communities and urban society. The overarching theme revolves around the many ways-structural, spatial, and cultural-in which urban systems create and maintain a hegemonic relationship with rural areas and people. Central to this theme is the concept of urbanormativity: the cultural assumption of the dominance and superiority of urban communities and patterns of life. Urbanormativity is an outgrowth of the structural forces in an urban society that favor the interests of cities over those of the countryside, of a generally exploitative relationship between the two. The structure of a society is encoded in the settlement space, which in turn influences one's experience. The experience of social space produces cultural dynamics that are reproduced from generation to generation. These mechanisms are explored through popular culture, physical patterns of urban expansion, and historical patterns of social change.

Full Product Details

Author:   Alexander R. Thomas ,  Brian Lowe ,  Greg Fulkerson ,  Polly Smith
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 14.20cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 21.30cm
Weight:   0.286kg
ISBN:  

9780739135600


ISBN 10:   0739135600
Pages:   224
Publication Date:   31 May 2013
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

The cultural, spatial, and structural mechanisms of urbanormativity illuminated in Critical Rural Theory represent a crucial contribution to rural sociology and broader social science disciplines. Incorporating contemporary theory, rigorous empirical methods, and cultural analyses at the community level, this volume provides a sobering-yet emancipatory-account of the marginal position of rural communities in the spatial hierarchy. -- Christopher J. Stapel, University of Kentucky The literature on rural cultures in the United States has languished for years. This book takes a critical, cultural turn and provides a very strong argument for renewed attention to the rural areas of this country - its regional cultures and its social problems. Through the use of concrete examples from rural areas of New York State, the authors show readers that the sociological gaze should reach further than metropolitan hubs for interesting sociological analyses. By their example the authors urge us to look beyond the myths of our pastoral past to see the very real rural present and future. -- Karen Hayden, Merrimac College Exceeding the boundaries of both rural and urban sociology, Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture adapts critical theory and spatial analysis to render visible the rural peoples and cultures that feed us all and that so often shape our dreams of a peaceful past. Looking at how urban dependence on rural areas results in an urban cultural dominance, authors Alexander R. Thomas, Brian Lowe, Greg Fulkerson, and Polly Smith provide well-reasoned and varied perspectives for revaluing and re-evaluating the role of rural people and places in the global economy. Whether they are discussing real places or grand theories, the writers make an argument that will interest scholars and students of identity theory and cultural politics. -- Barbara Ching, Iowa State University With regard to the discipline, the authors give a nice overview of the somewhat puzzling 'retreat from the rural' of mainstream sociology in the early 20th century and the resulting 'urban bias.' They focus somewhat less on the parallel development and divergences of 'rural' and 'regular' (urbancentric) sociology as quasi-independent fields, complete with separate scholarly organizations and intellectual orientations. Interestingly they also point to the recent retreat from the rural among departments formerly known as rural, now identified variously as some combination of 'development,' 'community,' or 'environmental' sociology... I found much in the book to recommend... I hope that this book will be of interest and use to a broad range of sociologists-and not only those who are already interested in the rural. American Journal of Sociology


With regard to the discipline, the authors give a nice overview of the somewhat puzzling `retreat from the rural' of mainstream sociology in the early 20th century and the resulting `urban bias.' They focus somewhat less on the parallel development and divergences of `rural' and `regular' (urbancentric) sociology as quasi-independent fields, complete with separate scholarly organizations and intellectual orientations. Interestingly they also point to the recent retreat from the rural among departments formerly known as rural, now identified variously as some combination of `development,' `community,' or `environmental' sociology. . . . I found much in the book to recommend. . . . I hope that this book will be of interest and use to a broad range of sociologists-and not only those who are already interested in the rural. * American Journal of Sociology * Noting that cultural analyses of rural areas are lacking in the scholarly literature, the authors take as their primary task the investigation of culture in relation to political-economy and the organization of space. . . .[The book's] broad theoretical approach to analyzing the urban/rural divide in terms of the interaction of structure, space and culture is a welcome contribution to a general sociological literature that overlooks rural space and a rural sociological literature that often reifies and depoliticizes it by treating it as a categorical variable. * Contemporary Sociology * The cultural, spatial, and structural mechanisms of urbanormativity illuminated in Critical Rural Theory represent a crucial contribution to rural sociology and broader social science disciplines. Incorporating contemporary theory, rigorous empirical methods, and cultural analyses at the community level, this volume provides a sobering-yet emancipatory-account of the marginal position of rural communities in the spatial hierarchy. -- Christopher J. Stapel, University of Kentucky The literature on rural cultures in the United States has languished for years. This book takes a critical, cultural turn and provides a very strong argument for renewed attention to the rural areas of this country - its regional cultures and its social problems. Through the use of concrete examples from rural areas of New York State, the authors show readers that the sociological gaze should reach further than metropolitan hubs for interesting sociological analyses. By their example the authors urge us to look beyond the myths of our pastoral past to see the very real rural present and future. -- Karen E. Hayden, Merrimac College Exceeding the boundaries of both rural and urban sociology, Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture adapts critical theory and spatial analysis to render visible the rural peoples and cultures that feed us all and that so often shape our dreams of a peaceful past. Looking at how urban dependence on rural areas results in an urban cultural dominance, authors Alexander R. Thomas, Brian Lowe, Greg Fulkerson, and Polly Smith provide well-reasoned and varied perspectives for revaluing and re-evaluating the role of rural people and places in the global economy. Whether they are discussing real places or grand theories, the writers make an argument that will interest scholars and students of identity theory and cultural politics. -- Barbara Ching, Iowa State University


The cultural, spatial, and structural mechanisms of urbanormativity illuminated in Critical Rural Theory represent a crucial contribution to rural sociology and broader social science disciplines. Incorporating contemporary theory, rigorous empirical methods, and cultural analyses at the community level, this volume provides a sobering-yet emancipatory-account of the marginal position of rural communities in the spatial hierarchy. -- Christopher J. Stapel, University of Kentucky The literature on rural cultures in the United States has languished for years. This book takes a critical, cultural turn and provides a very strong argument for renewed attention to the rural areas of this country - its regional cultures and its social problems. Through the use of concrete examples from rural areas of New York State, the authors show readers that the sociological gaze should reach further than metropolitan hubs for interesting sociological analyses. By their example the authors urge us to look beyond the myths of our pastoral past to see the very real rural present and future. -- Karen Hayden, Merrimack College Exceeding the boundaries of both rural and urban sociology, Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture adapts critical theory and spatial analysis to render visible the rural peoples and cultures that feed us all and that so often shape our dreams of a peaceful past. Looking at how urban dependence on rural areas results in an urban cultural dominance, authors Alexander R. Thomas, Brian Lowe, Greg Fulkerson, and Polly Smith provide well-reasoned and varied perspectives for revaluing and re-evaluating the role of rural people and places in the global economy. Whether they are discussing real places or grand theories, the writers make an argument that will interest scholars and students of identity theory and cultural politics. -- Barbara Ching, Iowa State University With regard to the discipline, the authors give a nice overview of the somewhat puzzling 'retreat from the rural' of mainstream sociology in the early 20th century and the resulting 'urban bias.' They focus somewhat less on the parallel development and divergences of 'rural' and 'regular' (urbancentric) sociology as quasi-independent fields, complete with separate scholarly organizations and intellectual orientations. Interestingly they also point to the recent retreat from the rural among departments formerly known as rural, now identified variously as some combination of 'development,' 'community,' or 'environmental' sociology...I found much in the book to recommend...I hope that this book will be of interest and use to a broad range of sociologists-and not only those who are already interested in the rural. American Journal of Sociology


The cultural, spatial, and structural mechanisms of urbanormativity illuminated in Critical Rural Theory represent a crucial contribution to rural sociology and broader social science disciplines. Incorporating contemporary theory, rigorous empirical methods, and cultural analyses at the community level, this volume provides a sobering-yet emancipatory-account of the marginal position of rural communities in the spatial hierarchy. -- Christopher J. Stapel, University of Kentucky The literature on rural cultures in the United States has languished for years. This book takes a critical, cultural turn and provides a very strong argument for renewed attention to the rural areas of this country - its regional cultures and its social problems. Through the use of concrete examples from rural areas of New York State, the authors show readers that the sociological gaze should reach further than metropolitan hubs for interesting sociological analyses. By their example the authors urge us to look beyond the myths of our pastoral past to see the very real rural present and future. -- Karen Hayden, Merrimac College Exceeding the boundaries of both rural and urban sociology, Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture adapts critical theory and spatial analysis to render visible the rural peoples and cultures that feed us all and that so often shape our dreams of a peaceful past. Looking at how urban dependence on rural areas results in an urban cultural dominance, authors Alexander R. Thomas, Brian Lowe, Greg Fulkerson, and Polly Smith provide well-reasoned and varied perspectives for revaluing and re-evaluating the role of rural people and places in the global economy. Whether they are discussing real places or grand theories, the writers make an argument that will interest scholars and students of identity theory and cultural politics. -- Barbara Ching, Iowa State University With regard to the discipline, the authors give a nice overview of the somewhat puzzling 'retreat from the rural' of mainstream sociology in the early 20th century and the resulting 'urban bias.' They focus somewhat less on the parallel development and divergences of 'rural' and 'regular' (urbancentric) sociology as quasi-independent fields, complete with separate scholarly organizations and intellectual orientations. Interestingly they also point to the recent retreat from the rural among departments formerly known as rural, now identified variously as some combination of 'development,' 'community,' or 'environmental' sociology...I found much in the book to recommend...I hope that this book will be of interest and use to a broad range of sociologists-and not only those who are already interested in the rural. American Journal of Sociology


Author Information

Alexander R. Thomas is associate professor of sociology at SUNY College at Oneonta. He is also the author of The Evolution of the Ancient City: Urban Theory and the Archaeology of the Fertile Crescent. Brian Lowe is assistant professor of sociology at SUNY College at Oneonta. Greg Fulkerson is assistant professor of sociology at SUNY College at Oneonta. Polly Smith is assistant professor of sociology at Utica College.

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