Such critiques coincided with the increasing influence of postmodernism and poststructuralism on geography, leading to an emphasis on meaning, representation and power relations.
Together, postcolonial, postmodern and poststructural feminist geographies sought to destabilise and decentre gender; to dismantle gender as a stable construct, reposition it as one of many identity producers, and to examine the ways that gender categories themselves are socially constructed.
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