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Frances Bukovsky's avatar

Thank you for sharing these descriptions of radical queer ecology! When I teach photography I often reference queer ecology, but have struggled to point to a singular definition for similar reasons to what you’ve described (and my brain has an apparent allergy to simplification), but this is a really helpful article for framing that, and I look forward to sharing it! Also I profoundly appreciate the mention of rural queerness-as someone who is trans and queer and chooses to live in rural spaces, so much of my embodied experience with ecology is through that lens, and has shaped my interest in queer ecology.

Kenzie🦋Reloaded's avatar

Interesting. I also picked up on the mention of rural queer people. Because we definitely can see how queer and trans people need to be proximal towards Urban areas for survival. Cities draw queer and trans people for good reason. Access to services is much better in urban settings or close to cities. But that's a problem for those that would prefer to live rural. Because they may have to sacrifice any support that they would expect in the Urban centers. And also, is rural life inherently conservative and non queer? I know from my own experience that queer people are there but must be sought out. I prefer semi rural or rural living, but if you're trans or queer it certainly comes with a cost.

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