The 'Country Queers' Who Don't Want to Flee Rural America




On the Media show

Summary: <p>All across the country this month, people are celebrating queer and trans pride with parades, cookouts, dances, and family gatherings. And yet the <em>future</em> of the community feels darker than it has in a long time. Threats from Proud Boys and elected officials seem to reinforce the idea that LGBT people cannot survive or thrive in places outside a few coastal cities. But a study from the <a href="https://www.lgbtmap.org/policy-and-issue-analysis/rural-lgbt">Movement Advancement Project</a> in 2019 revealed that at least 3 million queer people live in rural America. And many have no interest in fleeing to big cities for protection. This week, Annalee Newitz sits in for Brooke, and talks to Rae Garringer about their oral history project, <a href="https://www.countryqueers.com/">Country Queers</a>. When Garringer was attending college in the early 2000s, the only queer rural representation they saw was in crime stories. <a href="https://www.countryqueers.com/">Country Queers</a> features LGBT people who are living in rural parts of the United States, in small towns and remote farms, and they’re often taking great joy in it. </p>