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Whats Love Got to do with It

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Outback' romance? A reading of nature and heterosexuality in rural Australia. ... Check for links between heterosexual 'machismo', romance, and nature ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Whats Love Got to do with It


1
Lecture 18
  • Whats Love Got to do with It?
  • Can Romance Help the Natural World?
  • Can the Natural World help Romance?

2
Norman Hadley Dr. Norman Hadley,
PhD Serendipity
Welcome
3
Faculty of Education, Memorial University, NL25
years The Sunflower Adad
  • Humanistic psychology
  • person-centered psychotherapy
  • art therapy phototherapy
  • bullying behavior
  • nonverbal communication
  • touch
  • motorcycling
  • selective mutism
  • Sutties tenderness taboo

4
  • Love - What is it? That is, what are some ideals
    about it throughout society?
  • What are some materials
  • - in the love environment?
  • - in the dating environment?
  • What are some of the practices of love?
  • What does your ideal mate
  • think like? (IDEAL)
  • look like? (MATERIAL)
  • act like? (PRACTICAL)
  • (though, we know there is much more to it
    that these three thingsbut its a good way to
    begin to understand)
  • How did or how do you find the ideal mate?

5
One way -
  • Through dating environment practices LINK
  • How does the natural landscape figure into dating
    and romance practices?
  • Examples? ---- Like this?

6
  • Or like this?

7
Reading
  • University College of London Department of
    Geography
  • Little, J. and Panelli, R. (2007). Outback
    romance? A reading of nature and heterosexuality
    in rural Australia. Sociologia Ruralis, 47 (3),
    173-188.

8
The Study
  • Thesis Questions
  • General How does heterosexuality play out in
    rural space?
  • Specific Can our understandings of nature
    reflect our sexuality?
  • Setting TV Bachelor-Type of Show in which bush
    bachelors seek sheilas (kangaroos) - -
    conceptions of outback masculinity are used to
    dominate/influence the women and the relationship

9
First
  • North American The Bachelor
  • (link)
  • Check for links between heterosexual machismo,
    romance, and nature
  • Is Andy macho against the backdrop of nature?
    Consider how the natural environment is used to
    act out masculinity, gender, and sexualityon
    parts of both Andy and Tessa in the video clip

10
Authors
  • Nature is not only a space or set of spaces as an
    end in itself (teleological), but an arena for
    sexuality and nature to interact

11
Setting in Australia
  • Desperately Seeking Sheila
  • - a 3 week date in a rural setting in hopes to
    pair up to potentially produce a family rural
    Australia is like a ghost town in many areas
  • (link)
  • Contrast the use of nature to display sexuality
    between the Aussies and the Americans

12
The authors found a gap in the literatures
  • The TV show opens with Vast, desolate and
    sheepy. Welcome to outback Australia. Its harsh
    way of life and dusty plains have little to offer
    lonesome cowboys. Out in the bush, convention
    dictates that sons stay at home and inherit the
    land. While boys are trained in the great
    outdoors, daughters are sent away to school and
    once they escape they rarely return (p. 179).
  • Consider Foucaults episteme -
  • Would you say that Americanized dating shows pay
    more or less attention to the natural world as it
    relates to romance?
  • That feminist research had categorized sexuality
    and its rituals square into the social category
    exclusively, paying little to no attention to
    natural environments as the social.
  • This parallels the experience of sociology at
    large until only recently as it scurries to
    incorporate the influences of/on nature/social.

13
Findings
  • The Australian outback is viewed as exotic, full
    of excitement and possibilities for adventure (is
    Halifax exotic? Describe the dating scene in
    Halifax according to our nature-episteme)
  • Nature can be used to restore a romantic feeling
    between couples, even though they are only moving
    between natural spaces (think about the 2nd
    Honeymoon phenomenon - what makes a natural
    space romantic?)
  • The UK sheilas find much emphasis on sunsets
    LINK Do your parents linger in the sunset? If
    not, is the natural landscape only related
    (mainly) to mate-seeking behavior, and then it,
    itself, disappears? Why/Not?
  • Despite much excitement and promise at first for
    most couples, most of the TV shows relationships
    dissolved within days (are you surprised?)
  • .

14
The Bush Bachelors
  • The word, bachelor, connotes heterosexuality in
    mainstream television (how would a Gay Bachelor
    show go over in Canada?)
  • The bush bachelors are depicted as strong and
    able, using guns, driving tractors (how/do guys
    in Halifax use nature to portray themselves as
    masculine? Heterosexual? Homosexual?)
  • The bachelors presented both a hostility and an
    empathy toward their environments largely, the
    bachelors tended to portray themselves as
    dominating/ conquering nature out of necessity
    for survival otherwise, their love of place was
    evident, along with a clear appreciation for
    farm/ranch life

15
The Sheilas
  • The TV producers played on the sort of country
    mouse/city mouse theme the bachelorettes are
    wearing the wrong clothing to feed the hogs
    finding the farmhand work disgusting and
    difficult one woman overcomes her distaste for
    the farm work, proving herself as a worthy
    participant in the outback of Australia (how/do
    women in Halifax use nature to portray themselves
    as feminine?)

16
Authors Conclusion
  • The way people understand nature and their place
    in it shapes the way they understand their own
    sexuality and their romantic relationships and
    it can even determine whether or not the
    relationships survive.
  • We need to be more inclusive of natural
    environments in our studies of sexuality in
    general.

17
  • Another example of televisions portrayal of
    sexuality and romance against the backdrop of
    nature? LINK Does this video clip evoke the same
    feelings of romance and nature? Whats the
    difference?
  • this is a good lead in for next class as we
    discuss animals in our social environmental
    consciousness

18
Wrap up
  • As Michael Bell (2004) claims, nature is, perhaps
    among other things, a social construction. What
    does this really mean? What is NOT a social
    construction in the Sheila video clip?
  • Sexuality and nature intersect through the ways
    we understand nature

Sexuality
Nature
19
Things
  • Papers!
  • READINGS for next class
  • (1) CP Curry, P. (2006). Ecological ethics An
    introduction (pp. 71-89, 95-99). Malden, MA
    Polity Press. (deep ecologyecofeminism)
  • (2) NET Gender and the Animal Rights Movement.
  • http//www.utanimalrights.com/gender.htm
  • (3) NET People for the Ethical Treatment of
    Animals. Draggin' Ladies Prove That There's
    Nothing Glamorous About Fur.
  • Coffeehaus sign-up sheet for Monday
  • Artifact Presentations
  • Please pick up artifacts today if youve not yet
    presented
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