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Martin states that 'just like any other piece of ground or imaginative space, a garden is a location for power struggles and ideological clashes.' She uses two Victorian gardeners in the mid-nineteenth century to show how 'gardening is a gendered spatial practice, a colonising act, a private pleasure and a public, social, and socially directed practice'.
Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of
Last amended 11 Jan 2007 13:34:24
115-125
The Gender of Gardens : The Space of the Garden in Nineteenth-Century Australia
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