Photovoice,claiming visibility,and women's farming identities in Australia |
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Affiliation: | 1. Space Dynamics Laboratory, Utah State University, Mailing: 3386 Loma Drive, Beale Air Force Base, CA, 95903, USA;2. Department of Environment and Society, Utah State University, Mailing: 5215 Old Main Hill, Logan, UT, 84322-5215, USA;3. Museums Victoria, Mailing: PO Box 666, Melbourne, VIC, 3001, Australia;1. School of Kinesiology and Health Studies, Queen''s University Kingston, ON, Canada;2. Department of Geography and Environmental Management, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, ON, Canada;1. Cornwall Business School, Falmouth University, Treliever Road, Penryn, TR10 9FE, UK;2. Geography and Environmental Management, School of Natural Sciences, Manchester Metropolitan University, Chester Street, Manchester, M1 5GD, UK |
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Abstract: | Despite an abundance of research on and growing social recognition of women's contributions to farming around the world, in many countries women farmers and their experiences are still relatively invisible to society. Museums Victoria's Invisible Farmer Project, the largest ever study of Australian women on the land, attempted to give voice to women farmers largely through a curated Facebook page. Our research, carried out between 2016 and 2018, examined the posted photographs and text as photovoice, supplemented by qualitative interviews, to understand the farming identities of participating women. Our analysis shows how these photovoices can represent a claim to visibility as farmers and can illuminate how women experience their own farming identities in relation to the landscapes of their farms and their perspectives on farmwork. We highlight the importance of emotional connections and carework in the women's identities. This study contributes to scholarship on emotional geographies by emphasizing the centrality of emotion in how women participating with the Invisible Farming Project construct and experience their farming identities. The importance of this finding lies in how greater visibility of women's farming identities might re-frame social understanding of farming as a relational and not just productive endeavor. |
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Keywords: | Agriculture Australia Emotional geographies Facebook Gender Photovoice |
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