The word ‘rural’ is in the public consciousness again and every time people start going in about the 'rural values’ 'rural way of life’ I remember just how subjective that word is.
I have a friend that lives in LA. He considers Columbus, OH to be 'rural.’ A population of over 900k. Thriving arts community, tons of culture festivals, every kind of restaurant you can think of, one of the most annoying college campuses ever, several smaller colleges, lots of queer spaces, comic book conventions, huge concerts… rural.
The town I live in considers itself 'rural.’ 38k population. Arts festival every year, a small pride celebration, monthly gallery hop, big Halloween festival. Five ice cream shops, three coffee shops, a couple fancy bars, so many grocery stores. Huge library, conservation and sustainability advocates, queer spaces, a hospital, one private college. Rural.
The town we nearly annexed, but lost the deal considers us 'urban’ compared to them. Less than 5k. They have a limited hospital, often send their surgeries here. Downtown has hardware store, bars, craft supply store, a couple grocery stores, pizza places. There’s some farmland, but much of the square acreage is golf. Mega churches. The houses here are 500k. Most people drive ATVs. They have a handful of festivals in the summer.
A town I would often get sent to to cover their high school sports- a little over 2k. There’s a Subway, a Domino’s, Family Dollar. Some bars, some corner stores. Some local crafts. All the students grow up knowing each other, most of them stay there. But they have craft fairs and art galleries, still.
Less rural still than the town I go through to get there, population of around 600. Houses, farmland, post office, general store.
Who would still look down upon the town of about 400 that I would go to sometimes- post office. Gas station. Bar. The school is the only big thing there.
And yet still, I have seen towns with population in the double digits that have a church and a post office.
Even just looking at the numbers doesn’t lend accuracy to what 'rural’ actually looks like. Because this is what it looks like in ohio, but it’s different in West Virginia- where your closest neighbor might be a mile down a hill. Or in Montana, where your town might be planned very tightly and your neighbors are very close, but the nearest grocery store is an hour and a half away. These are places I’ve been, friends that I’ve talked to. I’ve never been to Missouri or Alabama or Louisiana- I’m sure they have a unique experience of being 'rural.’
So my point is that when people talk about 'the rural experience’ or 'rural values,’ they are talking about millions of people across the entire country who all have lived unique lives- and who may not even agree on what 'rural’ is.
Think about who is talking, and who is being talked over, and who isn’t even being asked to join the conversation.