Growing up
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The recent surge of interest in the study of children and childhood has brought with it a keener recognition of the diversity of growing-up. What particularly distinguishes a rural upbringing, however, is the sharp disjunction between the symbolism and expectation of the Good Life (the emblematic) and the realities and experiences of growing-up in small, remote, poorly serviced and fractured communities (the corporeal). Yet socio-spatial exclusion of this kind is also typical of many childhoods away from the rural and can relate to children almost anywhere.
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Rather than being part of an ideal community many children, especially the least affluent and teenagers, felt dislocated and detached from village life. We uncover an alternative geography of exclusion and disenfranchisement. We explore some of the ways in which children encounter the countryside through their own experiences, and (re)examine the `rural’ from their own viewpoint. In this paper we begin to address this hidden geography by reporting on a study undertaken within rural Northamptonshire. Few studies have explicitly focused on what it is like to grow-up in the countryside, particularly within the United Kingdom today. In this emerging geography, most attention has been given to the experiences and behaviours of urban children.