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Exploring Sustainable Rural Materiality in Remote Areas: A Geographical Perspective of Ten Years of Research

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  • Angel Paniagua

    (Spanish Council for Scientific Research CSIC, 28071 Madrid, Spain)

Abstract

The scope of this research is to contribute, through qualitative bases and case studies, to the relevance of old and new materialities in the process of rural change and restructuring in remote rural areas. The research on rural materialities can be found in cultural studies of heritage, modern geographical history and postmodern rural geography, based on post-structural and Deleuzian geographies, mainly geographies of heterogeneous associations and experimental and vibrant materiality. Geographic materialities allow multiple approaches in rural geography. A first approximation allows us to distinguish between old and new materialities. In each old and new category, it is possible to use different approaches: qualities of place, more-than-human, rural change, assemblage theory, material design, emotional geographies and cultural heritage. The sustainability-related outcomes are the rural material styles reviewed. Styles of research on old materialism are based on (1) qualities on place, (2) heritage and its effects in place, and (3) rural restructuring. The new change in the conceptualization of the material world is based on reconstructed local materialism and dissolved traditional rural communities. The styles in new rural materialities in the rural geographical field are (1) rural restructuring processes and new materialities, (2) material values and sophisticated visions of the countryside, (3) ensembles and material lives, and (4) emotional negotiations and feelings.

Suggested Citation

  • Angel Paniagua, 2026. "Exploring Sustainable Rural Materiality in Remote Areas: A Geographical Perspective of Ten Years of Research," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(4), pages 1-18, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:4:p:2033-:d:1866472
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