Regional differences matter. Even in an increasingly globalized world, rhetorical attention to regionalism yields very different understandings of geographic areas and the people who inhabit them. Regional identities often become most apparent in the differences (real and perceived) between urban and rural areas. Politicians recognize the perceived differences and develop messages based on that knowledge. Media highlight and exacerbate the differences to drive ratings. Cultural markers (from memorials to restaurants and memoirs and beyond) point to the differences and even help to construct those divisions. The places identified as urban and rural even visually demarcate the differences at times. This volume explores how rhetoric surrounding the urban and rural binary helps shape our understanding of those regions and the people who reside there. Chapters from award-winning rhetorical scholars explain the implications of viewing the regions as distinct and divided, exploring how they influence our understanding of ourselves and others, politics and race, culture, space and place, and more. Attention to urban and rural spaces is necessary because those spaces both act rhetorically and are also created through rhetoric. In a time when thoughtful attention to regional division has become more critical than ever, this book is required reading to help think through and successfully engage the urban/rural divide.
"This book fills an important niche in rhetoric and communication studies. The chapters contained here engage the growing conversation about regionalism-and its attendant terms like space and place-while exploring rural and urban settings. Each chapter demonstrates how rhetorical constructions of place and space weave into discourse as persuasive evidence, as affective resonance, and as interpretative frame. The scholarship is impressive, the essays are well-written, the volume is invaluable."-Greg Dickinson, Professor and Chair, Communication Studies, Colorado State University