Abstract
Issues of gender are now commonly discussed in our discipline, but the discussion is fragmented and without clear organization. The author attempts to identify general areas for inquiry. Consideration of important questions within our discipline, and within feminist inquiry as a whole, should precede questions about gender and landscape. Within the latter, areas of gender-related discussion are suggested: our professional subculture; the use and orientation of our historical scholarship; the choice of landscapes for study; dualities and change; image, value, and emotion; use and adaptation; popular culture and consumerism; sexuality and design; and place, gender, and identity. The author concludes with a plea for more rigorous inquiry and advocates the replacement of dichotomies by an attention to diversity.
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