This study explored the experience of what it is to be a gay man
and to live in a rural community. The findings of this study show
that these men were able to live in rural locations by effectively
employing a diverse range of strategies to both combat the
difficulties of rural life and to enhance its advantages. The bush
was the place in which these men could find themselves, be
themselves and also find others like themselves. This book
documents a largely unreported aptitude and adeptness by rural gay
men to live contented lives in rural areas. It suggests that their
close affinity with place gives them a sense of belonging. It also
suggests that these men had the capacity for agency - the
individual's ability to exert autonomy over his life - that drove
their determination to control and improve their own lives and live
them the way they chose. This is a perspective that has been untold
in previous narratives of rural gay men. That gay men can live
fulfilled lives in the very places they are too often said to have
fled evokes an innovative understanding of what it is to be gay in
the bush.
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