Middle America (United States)

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A quiet street in a small Indiana town.

Middle America is a colloquial term for the United States heartland, especially the culturally conservative rural and suburban areas of the United States.

Middle America is generally used as both a geographic and cultural label, suggesting a Central United States small town or suburb where most people are middle class, Evangelical Christian or Catholic, and white. It is often caricatured in the same way as the American 1950s decade.

As a geographical label

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Geographically, the label Middle America refers to the territory between the East Coast of the United States (particularly the northeast) and the West Coast. The term has been used in some cases to refer to the inland portions of coastal states, especially if they are rural. Alternately, the term is used to describe the central United States.

As a cultural label

Middle America is contrasted with the more culturally progressive urban areas of the country, particularly, those of the East and West Coasts. The conservative values considered typical of Middle America (often called "family values" in American politics) are often called "Middle American values".[1][2]

The idea of Middle America may exclude locations such as Chicago (the third largest city in the United States and one of the world's ten alpha cities) and very wealthy cities like Aspen, Colorado. The coastal regions of the southern United States are implicitly included.

Economy

An abandoned American farm, June 2015

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The economy of Middle America is traditionally agricultural,[citation needed] though most inhabitants now live in suburban locales.[citation needed] Compared to coastal America, home prices tend to be low and economic disparities are less pronounced.[citation needed] Housing prices tend to be significantly less volatile than those on the coasts, and houses tend to appreciate in value more slowly.[3]

Politics

The phrase Middle American values is a political cliché; like family values, it refers to more traditional or conservative politics, although larger cities such as St. Louis, Missouri and Minneapolis, Minnesota, and major university towns such as Madison, Wisconsin, Columbia, Missouri and Lawrence, Kansas provide exceptions.[4][5]

Many of the political battleground states are situated in "Middle America".[3]

See also

References

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